Research Topics
| Wilhelm HofmannSummaryCountry: Germany Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Judging a group by sampling members: how the subdivision of a minority affects its perceived size and influenceWilhelm Hofmann
Department of Psychology, University of Wurzburg, Röntgenring 10, 97070 Wurzburg, Germany
J Soc Psychol 148:91-104. 2008..The manipulation also affected the perceived social influence of the minority on the committee's final decision about the proposal...
Impulses got the better of me: alcohol moderates the influence of implicit attitudes toward food cues on eating behaviorWilhelm Hofmann
Department of Psychology, University of Koblenz Landau, Landau, Germany
J Abnorm Psychol 117:420-7. 2008..They further demonstrate that measures of implicit attitudes toward tempting stimuli add incremental validity for the prediction of self-control outcomes...
Working memory capacity and self-regulatory behavior: toward an individual differences perspective on behavior determination by automatic versus controlled processesWilhelm Hofmann
Department of Psychology, University of Wurzburg, Wurzburg, Germany
J Pers Soc Psychol 95:962-77. 2008..Taken together, these results demonstrate the importance of working memory capacity for everyday self-regulation and suggest an individual differences perspective on dual-process or dual-system theories of human behavior...
Evaluative conditioning in humans: a meta-analysisWilhelm Hofmann
Department of Psychology, University of Wurzburg, Roentgenring 10, Wurzburg, Germany
Psychol Bull 136:390-421. 2010..These findings are discussed with regard to the procedural boundary conditions of EC and theoretical accounts about the mental processes underlying EC...
A meta-analysis on the correlation between the implicit association test and explicit self-report measuresWilhelm Hofmann
Department of Psychology, University of Landau, Germany
Pers Soc Psychol Bull 31:1369-85. 2005..These results suggest that implicit and explicit measures are generally related but that higher order inferences and lack of conceptual correspondence can reduce the influence of automatic associations on explicit self-reports...
Are "implicit" attitudes unconscious?Bertram Gawronski
Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, Social Science Centre, London, Canada
Conscious Cogn 15:485-99. 2006..Implications for the concept of "implicit attitudes" are discussed...
