Implicit association tests:: Stimuli validation from participant responses

Publication date

2024-04

Authors

Hogenboom, SAM
Schulz, K
van Maanen, LeendertORCID 0000-0001-9120-1075ISNI 0000000388786943

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

The Implicit Association Test (IAT, Greenwald et al., J. Pers. Soc. Psychol., 74, 1998, 1464) is a popular instrument for measuring attitudes and (stereotypical) biases. Greenwald et al. (Behav. Res. Methods, 54, 2021, 1161) proposed a concrete method for validating IAT stimuli: appropriate stimuli should be familiar and easy to classify – translating to rapid (response times <800 ms) and accurate (error < 10%) participant responses. We conducted three analyses to explore the theoretical and practical utility of these proposed validation criteria. We first applied the proposed validation criteria to the data of 15 IATs that were available via Project Implicit. A bootstrap approach with 10,000 ‘experiments’ of 100 participants showed that 5.85% of stimuli were reliably valid (i.e., we are more than 95% confident that a stimulus will also be valid in a new sample of 18- to 25–year-old US participants). Most stimuli (78.44%) could not be reliably validated, indicating a less than 5% certainty in the outcome of stimulus (in)validity for a new sample of participants. We then explored how stimulus validity differs across IATs. Results show that only some stimuli are consistently (in)valid. Most stimuli show between-IAT variances, which indicate that stimulus validity differs across IAT contexts. In the final analysis, we explored the effect of stimulus type (images, nouns, names, adjectives) on stimulus validity. Stimulus type was a significant predictor of stimulus validity. Although images attain the highest stimulus validity, raw data show large differences within stimulus types. Together, the results indicate a need for revised validation criteria. We finish with practical recommendations for stimulus selection and (post-hoc) stimulus validation.

Keywords

implicit association test, internal validity, stimulus validation, Social Psychology

Citation

Hogenboom, SAM, Schulz, K & van Maanen, L 2024, 'Implicit association tests: Stimuli validation from participant responses', British Journal of Social Psychology, vol. 63, no. 2, pp. 975-1002. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12688