Ciation Test (SC-IAT; Karpinski Steinman, 2006)–The SC-IAT is a modification of the IAT that assesses the strength of associations using a single target object. The measure was created to address what in some cases is a weakness of the IAT; that is, comparing the relative strength of associations of one target concept versus another. In some cases, this paradigm is perfectly reasonable, though in others it may not be ideal. Particularly when personality or self-concept targets are of interest, it may be preferable to examine associations between self and the target concept rather than comparing associations of the target concept with self to those of the target concept with an unspecified other (Karpinski Steinman, 2006). Like the IAT, the SC-IAT was developed primarily for use as an attitude measure, and shares many of the IAT’s properties described earlier. The SC-IAT has demonstrated I-CBP112MedChemExpress I-CBP112 promise in three separate studies, showing acceptable levels of internal consistency (average = .69), relative immunity from self-presentational biases or faking, and good unique predictive utility as compared to the IAT (Karpinski Steinman, 2006). In the present study, the SC-IAT was modified to provide an implicit assessment of interpersonal dependency. A pilot study was conducted in which participants (N = 30) were first given working definitions of the target categories “independent” and “dependent.” Independent was defined as the “tendency to not be influenced by others and to not rely on others for support.” Dependent was defined as the “tendency to rely on someone or something else for aid or support.” Participants then rated a list of adjectives according to how “independent” versus “dependent” they judged each word to be. Based on participant ratings, the four most representative words for each target category were selected forNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptJ Pers Assess. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 February 21.Cogswell et al.Pageinclusion in the appropriate version of the SC-IAT. Target words for the present study included the following: Self words (I, me, myself, participants’ first/last names); Independent words (independent, self-reliant, self-sufficient, self-confident); and Dependent words (dependent, attached, clingy, needy). The SC-IAT was used to determine participants’ associations of self with independent versus dependent words, and included two stages. In each stage, self words and target words were randomly presented on a computer monitor. In stage one, participants categorized self words and independent words on one key (by pressing the appropriate key on the keyboard), and dependent words on another key. In stage two, self words were categorized with dependent words on one key and independent words on another key. To compute an SC-IAT score, we followed the SC-IAT D-score algorithm proposed by Karpinski PeretinoinMedChemExpress NIK333 Steinman (2006). Data from the 24 practice trials in each stage, responses at less than 350ms, and non-responses were deleted, and errors were replaced with the stage mean plus an error penalty of 400ms. The difference between the first and second stages of the task was divided by the standard deviation of all correct non-practice response times, yielding scores that reflect more dependency-self associations as scores increase. In order to encourage automatic responses, a time deadline was built into the task, such that if participants failed to respond within 1500 m.Ciation Test (SC-IAT; Karpinski Steinman, 2006)–The SC-IAT is a modification of the IAT that assesses the strength of associations using a single target object. The measure was created to address what in some cases is a weakness of the IAT; that is, comparing the relative strength of associations of one target concept versus another. In some cases, this paradigm is perfectly reasonable, though in others it may not be ideal. Particularly when personality or self-concept targets are of interest, it may be preferable to examine associations between self and the target concept rather than comparing associations of the target concept with self to those of the target concept with an unspecified other (Karpinski Steinman, 2006). Like the IAT, the SC-IAT was developed primarily for use as an attitude measure, and shares many of the IAT’s properties described earlier. The SC-IAT has demonstrated promise in three separate studies, showing acceptable levels of internal consistency (average = .69), relative immunity from self-presentational biases or faking, and good unique predictive utility as compared to the IAT (Karpinski Steinman, 2006). In the present study, the SC-IAT was modified to provide an implicit assessment of interpersonal dependency. A pilot study was conducted in which participants (N = 30) were first given working definitions of the target categories “independent” and “dependent.” Independent was defined as the “tendency to not be influenced by others and to not rely on others for support.” Dependent was defined as the “tendency to rely on someone or something else for aid or support.” Participants then rated a list of adjectives according to how “independent” versus “dependent” they judged each word to be. Based on participant ratings, the four most representative words for each target category were selected forNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptJ Pers Assess. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 February 21.Cogswell et al.Pageinclusion in the appropriate version of the SC-IAT. Target words for the present study included the following: Self words (I, me, myself, participants’ first/last names); Independent words (independent, self-reliant, self-sufficient, self-confident); and Dependent words (dependent, attached, clingy, needy). The SC-IAT was used to determine participants’ associations of self with independent versus dependent words, and included two stages. In each stage, self words and target words were randomly presented on a computer monitor. In stage one, participants categorized self words and independent words on one key (by pressing the appropriate key on the keyboard), and dependent words on another key. In stage two, self words were categorized with dependent words on one key and independent words on another key. To compute an SC-IAT score, we followed the SC-IAT D-score algorithm proposed by Karpinski Steinman (2006). Data from the 24 practice trials in each stage, responses at less than 350ms, and non-responses were deleted, and errors were replaced with the stage mean plus an error penalty of 400ms. The difference between the first and second stages of the task was divided by the standard deviation of all correct non-practice response times, yielding scores that reflect more dependency-self associations as scores increase. In order to encourage automatic responses, a time deadline was built into the task, such that if participants failed to respond within 1500 m.