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Noise Level and Social Discrimination
University of Washington The hypothesis that noise would affect judgments (the degree of discrimination exhibited) about ongoing social situations was supported in an experiment both with regard to subjects' discriminations between victim and harmdoer roles and with regard to their discrimination between possible causes for the victim' s behavior. Information on a post-experimental questionnaire further suggested that noise did not affect subjects' ability to encode information, but may have hindered their ability to consider the information.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 5, No. 1,
95-99 (1979) |
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