Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28248
Title: A multi-site collaborative study of the hostile priming effect
Authors: McCarthy, R
Gervais, W
Aczel, B
Al-Kire, RL
Aveyard, M
Baraldo, SM
Baruh, L
Basch, C
Baumert, A
Behler, A
Bettencourt, A
Bitar, A
Bouxom, H
Buck, A
Cemalcilar, Z
Chekroun, P
Chen, JM
del Fresno-Díaz, Á
Ducham, A
Edlund, JE
ElBassiouny, A
Evans, TR
Ewell, PJ
Forscher, PS
Fuglestad, PT
Hauck, L
Hawk, CE
Hermann, AD
Hines, B
Irumva, M
Jordan, LN
Joy-Gaba, JA
Haley, C
Kačmár, P
Kezer, M
Körner, R
Kosaka, M
Kovacs, M
Lair, EC
Légal, JB
Leighton, DC
Magee, MW
Markman, K
Martončik, M
Müller, M
Norman, JB
Olsen, J
Oyler, D
Phills, CE
Ribeiro, G
Rohain, A
Sakaluk, J
Schütz, A
Toribio-Flórez, D
Tsang, JA
Vezzoli, M
Williams, C
Willis, GB
Young, J
Zogmaister, C
Keywords: hostile perceptions;social priming;social judgments;replication;hostile attributions;priming;crowdsourcing
Issue Date: 5-Feb-2021
Publisher: University of California Press
Citation: McCarthy, R. et al. (2021) 'A multi-site collaborative study of the hostile priming effect', Collabra: Psychology, 2021, 7 (1), 18738, pp. 1 - 16. doi: 10.1525/collabra.18738.
Abstract: In a now-classic study by Srull and Wyer (1979), people who were exposed to phrases with hostile content subsequently judged a man as being more hostile. And this “hostile priming effect” has had a significant influence on the field of social cognition over the subsequent decades. However, a recent multi-lab collaborative study (McCarthy et al., 2018) that closely followed the methods described by Srull and Wyer (1979) found a hostile priming effect that was nearly zero, which casts doubt on whether these methods reliably produce an effect. To address some limitations with McCarthy et al. (2018), the current multi-site collaborative study included data collected from 29 labs. Each lab conducted a close replication (total N = 2,123) and a conceptual replication (total N = 2,579) of Srull and Wyer’s methods. The hostile priming effect for both the close replication (d = 0.09, 95% CI [-0.04, 0.22], z = 1.34, p = .16) and the conceptual replication (d = 0.05, 95% CI [-0.04, 0.15], z = 1.15, p = .58) were not significantly different from zero and, if the true effects are non-zero, were smaller than what most labs could feasibly and routinely detect. Despite our best efforts to produce favorable conditions for the effect to emerge, we did not detect a hostile priming effect. We suggest that researchers should not invest more resources into trying to detect a hostile priming effect using methods like those described in Srull and Wyer (1979).
Description: Data Accessibility Statement: See Table 1.
Supplementary data: Peer Review History - docx file - available online at: https://online.ucpress.edu/collabra/article/7/1/18738/116070/A-Multi-Site-Collaborative-Study-of-the-Hostile#supplementary-data .
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28248
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1525/collabra.18738
Other Identifiers: ORCID iD: Will Gervais https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7790-1665
18738
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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