Project Implicit is an international collaborative network of nonprofit organizations and researchers who study potential social cognition. Thoughts and feelings are largely outside the scope of conscious consciousness and control. Project implications are the product of a team of scientists and their research has generated new ways to understand attitudes, stereotypes, and other hidden prejudices that affect cognition, judgment, behavior.
An implicit project is a non-profit organization that is an international collaborative work among researchers interested in implicit social recognition - thoughts and emotions beyond conscious consciousness and control. The purpose of the organization is to provide "virtual laboratory" for educating the public about hidden prejudice and collecting data on the Internet. Established in 1998, Project Implicit was founded by three scientists: Tony Greenwald (University of Washington), Mahzarin Banaji (Harvard University), Brian Nosek (University of Virginia). Project Implicit Mental Health started in 2011, led by Bethany Teachman (University of Virginia) and Matt Nock (Harvard University). Implicit projects also provide consulting services, lectures and seminars on science applications to implicit bias, diversity and inclusiveness, leadership, and practice and innovation. For details of these services, please visit https://www.projectimplicit.net/organization.html.
Projects at Washington University, Harvard University, and University of Virginia Tacit products explores the social perception of human behavior; its main focus is to investigate the gap between intention and action. The implicit associative test (IAT) is used to measure human knowledge when associating a concept (race, skin color, etc.) with a stereotype (eg stupid, intense) or evaluation (eg, good, evil) It is a special test used. Automatic Response By evaluating human values, Project Implicit encourages most participants to unevenly bias various topics unconsciously.