Risky and careful processing under stereotype threat: how performance is influenced by activated self-stereotypes

Men can't listen and women can't drive are just two of the many negative stereotypes about groups frequently encountered in our societies. And of course we would like to dismiss them as irrelevant and unfair and stop thinking about them. However, recent research suggests that in test situations, negative stereotypes sometimes act as self-fulfilling prophecies. The prevailing explanation is that the stereotype poses a threat to the individual and thereby induces anxiety. Drawing on Regulatory Focus Theory, the present work offers an alternative account: It is argued that positive stereotypes induce a state of eagerness (promotion focus) and that negative stereotypes induce a state of vigilance (prevention focus). Accordingly, the present findings indicate that when people are told their group can't perform a task well, they work more slowly but more cautiously, to try to make fewer mistakes. Conversely, when told their group performs well, people are fast but not very thorough. The research further shows that even a stereotype generally dismissed as untrue such as that of the "dumb blond" can affect a woman's confidence in her own ability. It is concluded that performance on tasks calling for vigilant strategies can even be improved by activated negative stereotypes, or, generally speaking, that the effect of stereotypes on performance depends on the task demands. The present findings are compared to those examining anxiety as a potential mediator of stereotype threat effects.

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
ISBN
9783899671803
3899671805
Dimensions
21 cm, 224 gr.
Extent
146 S. in getr. Zählung
Language
Englisch
Notes
graph. Darst.
Literaturverz. S. 115 - 126
Zugl.: Würzburg, Univ., Diss., 2005

Bibliographic citation
Psychologia universalis ; N.R., Bd. 35

Classification
Psychologie
Keyword
Testleistung
Stereotyp
Aktivierung

Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Lengerich, Berlin, Bremen, Riga, Rom, Viernheim, Wien, Zagreb
(who)
Pabst
(when)
c 2005
Creator

Table of contents
Rights
Bei diesem Objekt liegt nur das Inhaltsverzeichnis digital vor. Der Zugriff darauf ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
11.06.2025, 2:04 PM CEST

Data provider

This object is provided by:
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek. If you have any questions about the object, please contact the data provider.

Associated

Time of origin

  • c 2005

Other Objects (12)