1. ALLPORT, G. W. (1954). The nature of prejudice. Reading, Ma: Addison-Wesley.
2. BANSE, R., SEISE, J., & ZERBES, N. (2001). Implicit attitudes towards homosexuality: Reliability, validity, and controllability of the tat. Zeitschrift fur Experimentelle Psychologie, 48, 145–160.
3. BARGH, J. A. (1999). The cognitive monster: The case against the controllability of automatic stereotype effects. In S. Chaiken & Y. Trope (Eds.), Dual-process theories in social psychology (pp. 361–382). New York: Guilford.
4. BARNES-HOLMES, D., BARNES-HOLMES, Y., POWER, P., HAYDEN, E., MILNE, R., & STEWART, I. (2006). Do you really know what you believe? Developing the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (Irap) as a direct measure of implicit beliefs. The Irish Psychologist, 32, 169–177.
5. BARNES-HOLMES, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Stewart, I., & Boles, S. (in press). A sketch of the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (Irap) and the Relational Elaboration and Coherence (Rec) model. The Psychological Record.