Stereotype Threat Can Both Enhance and Impair Older Adults' Memory

Negative stereotypes about aging can impair older adults' memory via stereotype threat; however, the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are unclear. In two experiments, we tested competing predictions derived from two theoretical accounts of stereotype threat: executive-control interference...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2013-12, Vol.24 (12), p.2522-2529
Hauptverfasser: Barber, Sarah J., Mather, Mara
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container_title Psychological science
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creator Barber, Sarah J.
Mather, Mara
description Negative stereotypes about aging can impair older adults' memory via stereotype threat; however, the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are unclear. In two experiments, we tested competing predictions derived from two theoretical accounts of stereotype threat: executive-control interference and regulatory fit. Older adults completed a working memory test either under stereotype threat about age-related memory declines or not under such threat. Monetary incentives were manipulated such that recall led to gains or forgetting led to losses. The executive-control-interference account predicts that stereotype threat decreases the availability of executive-control resources and hence should impair working memory performance. The regulatory-fit account predicts that threat induces a prevention focus, which should impair performance when gains are emphasized but improve performance when losses are emphasized. Results were consistent only with the regulatory-fit account. Although stereotype threat significantly impaired older adults' working memory performance when remembering led to gains, it significantly improved performance when forgetting led to losses.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0956797613497023
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subjects Adult. Elderly
Age differences
Aged
Ageing
Aging
Aging - psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Developmental psychology
Executive control
Executive Function - physiology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Human
Humans
Incentives
Learning. Memory
Male
Memory
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
Middle Aged
Minority students
Older people
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Recall
Short term memory
Social attribution, perception and cognition
Social cognition
Social psychology
Stereotypes
Stereotyping
title Stereotype Threat Can Both Enhance and Impair Older Adults' Memory
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