Weight IAT
FREE for use with an Inquisit Lab or Inquisit Web license.Available Test Variations
Measures implicit weight bias using images of body shapes (Schwartz et al, 2003).
Measures implicit weight bias using images of faces (Schwartz et al, 2003).
References
Schwartz, M., Chambliss, H., Brownell, K., Blair, S., & Billington, C. (2003). Weight Bias among Health Professionals Specializing in Obesity. Obesity Research, 11(9), 1033-1039.
Chambliss, H., Finley, C., & Blair, S. (2004). Attitudes toward obese individuals among exercise science students. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 36(3), 468-74.
Schwartz, M., Vartanian, L., Nosek, B., & Brownell, K. (2006). The influence of one's own body weight on implicit and explicit anti-fat bias. Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.), 14(3), 440-7.
Roddy, S., Stewart, I., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2011). Facial reactions reveal that slim is good but fat is not bad: Implicit and explicit measures of body-size bias. European Journal of Social Psychology, 41(6), 688.