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Priming, Replication, and the Hardest Science.

Joseph Cesario1

  • 1Michigan State University cesario@msu.edu.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Behavioral priming effects are not universally replicable. Instead, these effects are context-dependent, requiring researchers to conduct direct replications to clarify findings and improve scientific understanding.

Keywords:
automatic social behaviorgoal primingprime to behaviorprimingreplication

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Behavioral Science

Background:

  • Recent concerns regarding the replicability of behavioral priming effects.
  • Calls for universal priming methodologies across contexts and populations.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To argue against misguided expectations of universal replicability in priming research.
  • To propose that priming effects are inherently sensitive to contextual variations.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical argumentation based on evolutionary psychology and computational neuroscience.
  • Analysis of the implications of context-dependency for replication studies.

Main Results:

  • Priming effects are expected to be sensitive to experimental features and participant populations.
  • Failures to replicate are currently uninformative due to a lack of predictive theories.

Conclusions:

  • Expectations of universal priming effects are inconsistent with evolutionary brain theory.
  • Priming researchers must prioritize direct replications of their own findings.
  • Improved theories are needed to predict contextual variations in priming effects.