Title of article
If I imagine it, then it happened: The Implicit Truth Value of imaginary representations
Author/Authors
Shidlovski، نويسنده , , Daniella and Schul، نويسنده , , Yaacov and Mayo، نويسنده , , Ruth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
13
From page
517
To page
529
Abstract
Imagination sometimes leads people to behave, feel, and think as though imagined events were real even when they know they were not. In this paper, we suggest that some understanding of these phenomena can be achieved by differentiating between Implicit Truth Value (ITV), a spontaneous truth evaluation, and Explicit Truth Value (ETV), a self-reported truth judgment. In three experiments, we measure ITV using the autobiographical Implicit Association Test (Sartori, Agosta, Zogmaister, Ferrara, & Castiello, 2008), which has been used to assess which of two autobiographical events is true. Our findings demonstrate that imagining an event, like experiencing an event, increases its ITV, even when people explicitly acknowledge the imagined event as false (Experiments 1a and 1b). Furthermore, we show that imagined representations generated from a first-person perspective have higher ITV than imagined representations generated from a third-person perspective (Experiment 2). Our findings suggest that implicit and explicit measures of truth differ in their sensitivity to properties underlying truth judgment. We discuss the contribution of characterizing events according to both ITV and ETV to the understanding of various psychological phenomena, such as lying and self-deception.
Keywords
Truth Value , Autobiographical implicit association test , imagination
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078232
Link To Document