Susceptibility and Resilience to Memory Aging Stereotypes: Education Matters More than Age

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Abstract

The authors examined whether the memory performance of young, middle-aged, and older adults would be influenced by stereotype versus counterstereotype information about age differences on a memory task. One hundred forty-nine adults from a probability sample were randomly assigned to a control group or to age-stereotype conditions. As predicted, counterstereotype information was related to higher recall compared to stereotype and control groups. This was true across all age groups, but only for those with more education. Both stereotype and counterstereotype information were related to lower recall compared to the control group across age groups for those with lower education. Results suggest those with more education are more resilient when faced with negative age stereotypes about memory and respond positively to counterstereotype information. In contrast, those with less education show greater susceptibility to the detrimental effects of age stereotypes and respond negatively to both stereotype and counterstereotype information about memory aging.

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Andreoletti, C., & Lachman, M. E. (2004). Susceptibility and Resilience to Memory Aging Stereotypes: Education Matters More than Age. Experimental Aging Research, 30(2), 129–148. https://doi.org/10.1080/03610730490274167

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