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. 2001 Dec;81(6):1014-27.

The automated will: nonconscious activation and pursuit of behavioral goals

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The automated will: nonconscious activation and pursuit of behavioral goals

J A Bargh et al. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2001 Dec.

Abstract

It is proposed that goals can be activated outside of awareness and then operate nonconsciously to guide self-regulation effectively (J. A. Bargh, 1990). Five experiments are reported in which the goal either to perform well or to cooperate was activated, without the awareness of participants, through a priming manipulation. In Experiment 1 priming of the goal to perform well caused participants to perform comparatively better on an intellectual task. In Experiment 2 priming of the goal to cooperate caused participants to replenish a commonly held resource more readily. Experiment 3 used a dissociation paradigm to rule out perceptual-construal alternative explanations. Experiments 4 and 5 demonstrated that action guided by nonconsciously activated goals manifests two classic content-free features of the pursuit of consciously held goals. Nonconsciously activated goals effectively guide action, enabling adaptation to ongoing situational demands.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Mean impression rating of target person’s achievement orientation in judgment task in standard units (left panel) and mean number of words found in performance task in standard units (right panel) by priming condition (P = high-performance goal, N = neutral) and postpriming delay, Experiment 3.

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