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  1. Dasgupta, N., & Greenwald, A. G. (2001). On the malleability of automatic attitudes: Combating automatic prejudice with images of admired and disliked individuals. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81(5), 800–814. https://

    • Nilanjana Dasgupta, Anthony G. Greenwald
    • 2001
  2. Nilanjana Dasgupta New School University Anthony G. Greenwald University of Washington Two experiments examined whether exposure to pictures of admired and disliked exemplars can reduce automatic preference for White over Black Americans and younger over older people. In Experiment 1,

    • 456KB
    • Nilanjana Dasgupta, Anthony G. Greenwald
    • 15
    • 2001
  3. When the first paper debuting the IAT as a new measure of automatic attitudes was being written in 1997 (Greenwald et al., 1998), one of us (Dasgupta) was metamorphosing from a graduate student into a postdoctoral fellow during the long drive from the east coast (New Haven, CT) to the west coast (Seattle, WA).

  4. Abstract. Authors discuss their seminal development of the Implicit Association Test (IAT) and the influence of familiarity on automatic attitudes. The authors also discuss the genesis of the idea for this research, which was nominated as part of the modern classics and overlooked gems in social psychology from the 1980s and 1990s series.

  5. Nov 1, 2001 · Implicit preferences for Whites compared to Blacks can be reduced via exposure to admired Black and disliked White individuals (Dasgupta & Greenwald, 2001). In four studies (total N = 4,628), while …

  6. Implicit preferences for Whites compared to Blacks can be reduced via exposure to admired Black and disliked White individuals (Dasgupta & Greenwald, 2001).

  7. Jun 30, 2019 · Dasgupta’s choices led to her scoring the recently released Netflix miniseries, Leila, based on the 2017 novel of the same name by Prayaag Akbar.

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