That experiment has changed Latham's opinion of priming and has him wondering now about the applications for unconscious primes in our daily lives.
He seems to have skipped right over the part where he wonders why he and Bargh see one thing and other people see something different. Do people update far more strongly on evidence if it comes from their own lab?
Also, yay priming! (I don't want this comment to sound negative about priming as such)
Do people update far more strongly on evidence if it comes from their own lab?
This strikes me as a special case of the principal that people update more strongly on evidence they directly observe.
Related: Social Psychology & Priming: Art Wears Off
I recommend reading the piece, but below are some excerpts and commentary.
Steve Sailer comments on this:
Not only advertisers the industry where he worked in but indeed our little community probably loves any results confirming such a picture. We need to be careful about that. Bartlett continues:
Here is a link to the wiki article on the mentioned misconduct. I recall some of the drama that unfolded around the outing and the papers themselves... looking at the kinds of results Stapel wanted to fake or thought would advance his career reminds me of some other older examples of scientific misconduct.
But I like the feeling of insight I get when thinking about cool applications of embodied cognition! (;_:)
I'll admit that took me a few seconds too long to parse. (~_^)
Well yes dear journalist that has been the narrative you've just presented to us readers.
How entertaining a plot twist! Or maybe a journalist is writing a story about out of a confusing process where academia tries to take account of a confusing array of new evidence. Of course that's me telling a story right there. Agggh bad brain bad!
Admirable that he's come to the latter attitude after the early angry blog posts prompted by what he was going through. That wasn't sarcasm, scientists are only human after all, there are easier things to do than this.