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No, because both & are independent of the metric convention. Or put it another way, because the metric does not explicitly appear in the slash definition.
Contrast with the definitions:
and
where the sign is metric convention dependent, + for g(+---) and - for g(-+++).
I agree with the response above, but when lowering indexes you have to take the metric in account. Therefore, is wrong to say that , because the dot product between and is the standard inner product of the orthonormal Euclidean space.
In this way, I've corrected the signs in the matrix. You can check on Griffiths, for instance, that the correct form is this one.