Thank you for this valuable overview, it’s worth bookmarking.
The link in section 3 does not support the idea that humans don’t suffer from a priming effect (this may not have been what you meant, but that’s how it sounds). Rather, the studies are underpowered and there is evidence of positive-result publication bias. This doesn’t mean the published results are wrong, it means ‘grain of salt’ and replication is needed. LWers often reasonably believe things on less evidence than 12 studies.
Thank you for this valuable overview, it’s worth bookmarking.
The link in section 3 does not support the idea that humans don’t suffer from a priming effect (this may not have been what you meant, but that’s how it sounds). Rather, the studies are underpowered and there is evidence of positive-result publication bias. This doesn’t mean the published results are wrong, it means ‘grain of salt’ and replication is needed. LWers often reasonably believe things on less evidence than 12 studies.