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Awareness of the existence of the response. |
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Awareness of the existence of a change process. |
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Reports about cognitive processes. |
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Subliminal
Perception |
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Reports on problem solving processes. |
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Reports on the effects of the presence of others
on helping behavior |
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Erroneous reports about stimuli influencing
associative behavior. |
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Erroneous reports about position effects on
appraisal and choice. |
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Erroneous reports about anchoring effects and
predictions. |
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Erroneous reports about the influence of an
individual’s personality on reactions to his physical characteristics. |
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Erroneous reports about the emotional impact of
literary passages. |
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Erroneous reports about the effects of
distractions on reactions to a film. |
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Erroneous reports about the effects of
reassurance on willingness to take electric shocks. |
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the culture or subculture may supply implicit
theories about causal relations |
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the culture may have explicit rules stating the
relationship between a particular stimulus and a particular response |
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an individual may hold a particular causal
theory on the basis of empirical observation of covariation between stimuli
of the general type and responses of the general type. |
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in the
absence of a culturally supplied rule, implicit causal theory, or
assumption about covariation, people may be able to generate causal
hypotheses linking even novel stimuli and novel responses |
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Removal in time: Perhaps chief among the
circumstances that should decrease accuracy in a self- report is a
separation in time between the report and the actual occurrence of the
process. |
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Mechanics of judgement |
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Context |
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Nonevents |
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Nonverbal behavior |
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Discrepancy between the magnitudes of cause and
effect |
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These conditions may be summarized briefly by
saying that reports will be accurate when influential stimuli are (a)
available and (b) plausible causes of the response, and when
(c) few or no plausible but non influential factors are available. |
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Some evidence in the literature that people can
sometimes accurately report on the stimuli that influence particular
cognitive processes (a) learning without awareness and (b) awareness of
factors influencing complex judgements. |
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confusion between content and process: access to
much content, but little process. |
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knowledge of prior idiosyncratic reactions to a
stimulus category |
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differences in causal theories between
sub-cultures |
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attention and intentional knowledge |
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inadequate feedback: Disconfirmation of
hypotheses about the workings of our minds is hard to come by |
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