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In psychology there's a phenomenon known as the Mere Exposure Effect. It basically states that the more we are exposed to something the more we come to like it. ... by Allen Thompson ... If you two have a class together, if she sits near you at work, if you often see her at the gym, all these exposures are working to...
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www.sosuave.com/quick/tip29.htm
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Repeated exposure of a nonreinforced stimulus results in an increased preference for that stimulus, the mere exposure effect. ... Repeated exposure of a nonreinforced stimulus results in an increased preference for that stimulus, the mere exposure effect. The present study repeatedly presented positive, negative,
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www.medscape.com/medline/abstract/15974346
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Previous researchers (e. ... Although the mere exposure effect and endowment effect did not produce an interaction, they produced independent effects. The endowment effect increased object valuation but not object preference. The mere exposure effect increased object preference but not object valuation.
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www.medscape.com/medline/abstract/17479582
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The more exposure we have to a stimulus, the more we will tend to like it. ... Explanations > Theories > Mere Exposure Theory ... The exposure effect is linked to the disgraced world of subliminal messages and subliminal (<50ms) exposure has increased liking.
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changingminds.org/explanations/theories/mere_exposure.h...
changingminds.org/explanations/theories/mere_exposure.htm
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A psychological phenomenon whereby people feel a preference for people or things simply because they are familiar. Also known as the exposure effect and the familiarity principle.
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psychcentral.com/encyclopedia/2009/mere-exposure-effect...
psychcentral.com/encyclopedia/2009/mere-exposure-effect/
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Illustration of the Mere Exposure Effect ... So, other things being equal, people prefer them. How many times have you gravitated towards people you know even a little at parties where everyone else is a stranger? The mere exposure effect.
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http-server.carleton.ca/~warrent/2100/exposure%20effect...
http-server.carleton.ca/~warrent/2100/exposure%20effect.html
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research was to assess effects of mere exposure measured as it might ..... descriptions may underlie the mere exposure effect. Visual Cognition, 6, ...
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people.psych.cornell.edu/~jec7/pubs/103.pdf
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Zajonc's thesis that "mere exposure" enhances attitudes is both novel and intriguing. ... the other consists of data on the effect upon positive or negative affect of experimental manipulation of stimulus exposure. Let us see how this evidence bears upon Zajonc's hypothesis.
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www.soc.hawaii.edu/leonj/499s99/yamauchi/mere.htm
www.soc.hawaii.edu/leonj/499s99/yamauchi/mere.htm
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Affective models of the mere exposure effect propose that repeated exposure to a stimulus increases the positive affect or reduces the negative affect toward the stimulus, whereas recent cognitive models propose that affect is not involved in the mere exposure effect.
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psp.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/27/7/889
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