• Title/Summary/Keyword: 암묵연합검사

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A Study of Inducing spontaneous deceptive behavior in virtual environment (가상현실공간에서의 순간적 거짓행동 유발연구)

  • Jung, Kyu-Hee;Lee, Jang-Han
    • 한국HCI학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2008.02a
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    • pp.125-129
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    • 2008
  • Lying has been such a wrong act in human society, but at the same time we are perpetrating lying surprisingly often in the interpersonal situation. Like this, between what we think and what we do about telling lie is pretty different, and these differences are came from ambivalent attitudes stemmed from different sources which is divided into the implicit and the explicit attitude. We find manipulative liars by simulated racing task by using virtual environment. Implicit Association Test was applied to them to see implicit beliefs, and used self-reported questionnaires to identify explicit attitude about lying. As a result they could manipulate the explicit measures but could not maneuver their own implicit attraction to lie Liars' deceptive behaviors usually occur in subtle and covert way so that it has been hard to notice and to know what lead them to lie. However, as we know those spontaneous process is linked with deception, triggering them lie, it became no more veiled, unpredictable actions.

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Implicit Self-anxious and Self-depressive Associations among College Students with Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms (외상 경험자의 암묵적 자기-불안 및 자기-우울의 연합)

  • Yun Kyeung, Choi;Jae Ho, Lee
    • Korean Journal of Culture and Social Issue
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.451-472
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    • 2018
  • The purpose of this study was to examine implicit associations of negative emotion (i.e. anxiety and depression) and self among a college students having experienced posttraumatic stress symptoms. The participants were 61 college students(male 16, female 45). They were classified into two groups, trauma group(n=35) and control group(n=26) according to scores of Korean version of Impact of Events Scale-Revised. Two groups were compared with regard to automatic self-anxious and self-depressive associations measured with the Implicit Association Test using both words and facial expression pictures, respectively. As results, trauma group showed more enhanced self-anxious association in the words conditions, and stronger self-anxious and self-depressive associations in the pictures conditions than control group, whereas there were no significant differences between two groups in explicit cognition and depression. These results suggest that traumatic experiences could influence self-concepts in the automatic process. Limitations of the current study and suggestions for future research were discussed.