Page 162 - Emotions through the eyes of our closest living relatives- Exploring attentional and behavioral mechanisms
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                                Chapter 7
(D-score: .24, 95% CI [.16, .32], t(124) = 5.97, p < .001). We also found a main effect of order (F(1, 124) = 14.22, p < .001), meaning that adults who receive incongruent trials first show a higher D-score on average (M = .39, SD = .41) than adults who receive congruent trials first (M = .09, SD = .46). We found no main effect of task version on D-score (F(2, 124) = .07, p = .936, Table 1 as well as supplemental Figure S4). Lastly, when assessing the internal consistency of the adult PIAT, we found split-half reliability of r = .84.
Figure 3. D-score distribution for the adult (left) and child PIAT (right). Positive values represent stronger associations between pictures of men of Dutch descent and positive scenes, and pictures of men of Moroccan descent and negative scenes.
Child PIAT
Children showed statistically significant positive D-score average of .14 (95% CI [.08, .21], t(141) = 4.56, p < .001, Cohen’s d = .38), meaning that children associate faces of men of Dutch descent with positivity, and faces of men of Moroccan descent with negativity (Figure 3, Table 1). Using a linear model with Congruency and Task Version
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