Do you frequently judge people that you do not know?

Anyone curious about their subconscious reaction toward a group can check this out and see: https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/demo/selectatest.html

I took the skin color and Arab/Muslim ones.
You have completed the Light Skin - Dark Skin IAT.
Your Result
Your data suggest little to no automatic preference between Light Skin and Dark Skin.

Thank you for your participation. Just below is a breakdown of the scores generated by others. Most respondents find it easier to associate Dark Skin with Bad and Light Skin with Good compared to the reverse.
Skin score distribution

Many of the questions that you answered on the previous page have been addressed in research over the last 10 years. For example, the order that you performed the response pairing is influential, but procedural corrections largely eliminate that influence (see FAQ #1). Each visitor to the site completes the task in a randomized order. If you would like to learn more about the IAT, please visit the FAQs and background information section.

You are welcome to try additional demonstration tasks, and we encourage you to register (easy) for the research site where you will gain access to studies about more than 100 topics about social groups, personality, pop culture, and more.​
https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/Study?tid=-1
You have completed the Arab-Muslim - Other People IAT.
Your Result
Your data suggest little to no automatic preference between Other People and Arab Muslims.

Thank you for your participation. Just below is a breakdown of the scores generated by others. Most respondents find it easier to associate Arab Muslim with Bad and Other People with Good compared to the reverse.
Arab score distribution

This new test was prompted by the events of September 11, 2001. Suicide pilots, identified as Arab Muslims, crashed airplanes into the World Trade Center towers in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. killing about 4,000 people. That attack, and the military response by the United States and other countries in Afghanistan and Iraq have surely influenced conscious and unconscious beliefs and attitudes.

We constructed this test of attitude toward Arab Muslims relative to a category consisting of 'Other People' from around the world. Unfortunately, we do not have data on implicit attitudes toward Arab Muslims prior to September 11, with which the attitudes since can be compared. Nevertheless, we introduce this test because we expect that the events of September 11 and its aftermath open a new chapter in the history of the relations among world communities that differ in religious, political, and social ideology. As with other tests at this site, this one may provide insight into implicit attitudes that may not be in line with conscious attitudes or desired attitudes.

Many of the questions that you answered on the previous page have been addressed in research over the last 10 years. For example, the order that you performed the response pairing is influential, but procedural corrections largely eliminate that influence (see FAQ #1). Each visitor to the site completes the task in a randomized order. If you would like to learn more about the IAT, please visit the FAQs and background information section.

You are welcome to try additional demonstration tasks, and we encourage you to register (easy) for the research site where you will gain access to studies about more than 100 topics about social groups, personality, pop culture, and more.​
https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/Study?tid=-1

If anyone is interested in insight.

I did the test. It showed that I have a moderate automatic preference for Straight People compared to Gay People.

Doing the test, it felt like I had a moderate loss of focus while performing a mundane task.
LOL! I imagine that the mundane nature of it is necessary to be able to tap more effectively into one's subconscious.

K. I've done three and that's all I can take at this time. It is mundane.
 
Anyone curious about their subconscious reaction toward a group can check this out and see: https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/demo/selectatest.html

I took the skin color and Arab/Muslim ones.
You have completed the Light Skin - Dark Skin IAT.
Your Result
Your data suggest little to no automatic preference between Light Skin and Dark Skin.

Thank you for your participation. Just below is a breakdown of the scores generated by others. Most respondents find it easier to associate Dark Skin with Bad and Light Skin with Good compared to the reverse.
Skin score distribution

Many of the questions that you answered on the previous page have been addressed in research over the last 10 years. For example, the order that you performed the response pairing is influential, but procedural corrections largely eliminate that influence (see FAQ #1). Each visitor to the site completes the task in a randomized order. If you would like to learn more about the IAT, please visit the FAQs and background information section.

You are welcome to try additional demonstration tasks, and we encourage you to register (easy) for the research site where you will gain access to studies about more than 100 topics about social groups, personality, pop culture, and more.​
https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/Study?tid=-1
You have completed the Arab-Muslim - Other People IAT.
Your Result
Your data suggest little to no automatic preference between Other People and Arab Muslims.

Thank you for your participation. Just below is a breakdown of the scores generated by others. Most respondents find it easier to associate Arab Muslim with Bad and Other People with Good compared to the reverse.
Arab score distribution

This new test was prompted by the events of September 11, 2001. Suicide pilots, identified as Arab Muslims, crashed airplanes into the World Trade Center towers in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. killing about 4,000 people. That attack, and the military response by the United States and other countries in Afghanistan and Iraq have surely influenced conscious and unconscious beliefs and attitudes.

We constructed this test of attitude toward Arab Muslims relative to a category consisting of 'Other People' from around the world. Unfortunately, we do not have data on implicit attitudes toward Arab Muslims prior to September 11, with which the attitudes since can be compared. Nevertheless, we introduce this test because we expect that the events of September 11 and its aftermath open a new chapter in the history of the relations among world communities that differ in religious, political, and social ideology. As with other tests at this site, this one may provide insight into implicit attitudes that may not be in line with conscious attitudes or desired attitudes.

Many of the questions that you answered on the previous page have been addressed in research over the last 10 years. For example, the order that you performed the response pairing is influential, but procedural corrections largely eliminate that influence (see FAQ #1). Each visitor to the site completes the task in a randomized order. If you would like to learn more about the IAT, please visit the FAQs and background information section.

You are welcome to try additional demonstration tasks, and we encourage you to register (easy) for the research site where you will gain access to studies about more than 100 topics about social groups, personality, pop culture, and more.​
https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/Study?tid=-1

If anyone is interested in insight.

I did the test. It showed that I have a moderate automatic preference for Straight People compared to Gay People.

Doing the test, it felt like I had a moderate loss of focus while performing a mundane task.
LOL! I imagine that the mundane nature of it is necessary to be able to tap more effectively into one's subconscious.

K. I've done three and that's all I can take at this time. It is mundane.

Maybe I will try it again sometime...I would think that being a little more focused on the task would help to be more accurate.
 
I did the test. It showed that I have a moderate automatic preference for Straight People compared to Gay People.

Doing the test, it felt like I had a moderate loss of focus while performing a mundane task.
LOL! I imagine that the mundane nature of it is necessary to be able to tap more effectively into one's subconscious.

K. I've done three and that's all I can take at this time. It is mundane.

Maybe I will try it again sometime...I would think that being a little more focused on the task would help to be more accurate.
I would think so, too.
 
Would you have any preconceived thoughts about someone who would do this?

idiot01.jpg
Yup .That ones an idiot.
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves. You can laugh all you want and make a judgement about me by what I post, and that's okay. How you judge me ... what you think of me is none of my business. It's your business.
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves

Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.

Your from The United Kingdom, you have bad teeth and smell funny. Who cares what you think....

OP:
No, I don't judge people.
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves

Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.
Says you.
You don't know anything about me. What I've been through, what my goals are, how I'm trying to better myself.

As a society it is normal for one to judge another, without really thinking or realizing they are making a judgement. Each day I take a walk during the lunch time hour and I encounter many people. And yes, judgements are made based on what I see. But the difference is, I have made myself aware of the judgements as they happen and I am doing something to change that.
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves

Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.

Your from The United Kingdom, you have bad teeth and smell funny. Who cares what you think....

OP:
No, I don't judge people.

It's you're, not your. You stupid boy!

Though your ignorance coincides nicely with my blanket judgement: You're over weight and unintelligent.
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves

Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.
Says you.
You don't know anything about me. What I've been through, what my goals are, how I'm trying to better myself.

As a society it is normal for one to judge another, without really thinking or realizing they are making a judgement. Each day I take a walk during the lunch time hour and I encounter many people. And yes, judgements are made based on what I see. But the difference is, I have made myself aware of the judgements as they happen and I am doing something to change that.

I think that you are a man.
 
Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.

Your from The United Kingdom, you have bad teeth and smell funny. Who cares what you think....

OP:
No, I don't judge people.

It's you're, not your. You stupid boy!

Though your ignorance coincides nicely with my blanket judgement: You're over weight and unintelligent.

Your flag is wrinkled which leads me to believe that you don't iron.

This is what your flag should look like:

uni0970_s.jpg
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves

Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.

Your from The United Kingdom, you have bad teeth and smell funny. Who cares what you think....

OP:
No, I don't judge people.


I just judged Jeremy by his avatar.

Jeremy now officially sucks! :lol:

Go Yankees!
 
No. I don't judge strangers or loved ones, nor do I judge myself.

Those who are critical and judgmental of others, don't know how to love themselves

Pot calling the kettle black, there, masquerade.
Says you.
You don't know anything about me. What I've been through, what my goals are, how I'm trying to better myself.

As a society it is normal for one to judge another, without really thinking or realizing they are making a judgement. Each day I take a walk during the lunch time hour and I encounter many people. And yes, judgements are made based on what I see. But the difference is, I have made myself aware of the judgements as they happen and I am doing something to change that.

No no no, masquerade, dear girl. You misunderstand me. You wrote that "those who judge others don't know how to love themselves", which in itself is a judgement of people you may not know. So in writing that you're saying you judge people, which contradicts your claim of not judging "strangers or loved ones".

And I never claimed to "know" you or your ambitions either.
 
No no no, masquerade, dear girl. You misunderstand me. You wrote that "those who judge others don't know how to love themselves", which in itself is a judgement of people you may not know. So in writing that you're saying you judge people, which contradicts your claim of not judging "strangers or loved ones".

And I never claimed to "know" you or your ambitions either.

So where do you draw that fine line between what beliefs you hold true, and that of a judgment?

I would like to change my original response to that of .... I consciously try NOT to judge people.
 

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