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Experimental Aging Research
An International Journal Devoted to the Scientific Study of the Aging Process
Volume 41, 2015 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

Positive Perception of Aging and Performance in a Memory Task: Compensating for Stereotype Threat?

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Pages 410-425 | Received 20 Jan 2013, Accepted 17 Jun 2014, Published online: 27 Jul 2015
 

Abstract

Background/Study Context: The aim of this research is to explore whether segments of seniors might be immune to aging stereotypes of the older adult group. Stereotype threat research indicates that older adults show low memory recall under conditions of stereotype threat. Stereotype internalization theory (Levy, 2009) predicts that a positive perception of aging has favorable effects on the behavior and health of older people.

Methods: A total of 112 older adult participants (62% women, aged 55 to 78) attending the University Programme for Older Adults were assigned to one of two conditions: stereotype threat condition and positive information condition. A control group was included from participants in the same program (n = 34; 61% women, aged 55 to 78). Individual differences in self-perception of aging were considered as continuous variable.

Results: Participants with better self-perception of aging showed better memory performance than those with poorer self-perception of aging in the stereotype threat condition and control condition. However, no differences were found in the positive information condition between participants with high and low self-perception of aging. These results indicate that positive self-perception of aging moderates the effects of stereotype threat, and that positive information promotes better memory performance for those older adults with a poorer self-perception of aging.

Conclusion: As expected, individuals with a positive perception of their own aging were less vulnerable to the activation of a negative older adult stereotype in the stereotype threat condition.

Notes

1 Liang and Bollen (Citation1985) found that the five self-perception of aging items loaded high on a single factor in a different data set. Levy et al. (Citation2002a, p. 412) also noted that these five items load high on a single factor (above .80), using an Ohio Longitudinal Study of Aging and Retirement sample (OLSAR; Levy et al., Citation2002a).

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