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Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 22, No. 4,
377-394 (1996)
DOI: 10.1177/0146167296224005
© 1996 Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.
On-Line Evidence for Spontaneous Trait Inferences at Encoding
James S. Uleman
New York University
Alex Hon
New York University
Robert J. Roman
New York University
Gordon B. Moskowitz
New York University
Three experiments obtained evidence that spontaneous trait inferences (STIs) occur on-line, at encoding. In each, participants read many sentences on a computer screen. After each paragraph, they indicated whether it included a test probe word. Paragraphs that imply but do not contain traits should increase errors or reaction times (RTs) to trait probes. In Experiment 1, trait-implying paragraphs produced more errors than control paragraphs, supporting the hypothesis. In Experiments 2 and 3, with feedback on each trial, longer RTs supported the hypothesis. STIs had the same effects as McKoon and Ratcliff's "predicting inferences. " Unexpectedly, participants gained control over STIs and predicting inferences, so that RT differences (and error differences in Experiment 1) declined over trials. Analyses of reading times in Experiment 3 ruled out several alternative explanations. Results demonstrate that social inferences can occur spontaneously at encoding and suggest that immediate feedback may make control possible.

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