Publication | Closed Access
Stereotyping of older adults: The role of target facial cues and perceiver characteristics.
105
Citations
34
References
1997
Year
AgingAgeismPerceiver CharacteristicsSocial PsychologySocial CategorizationPerceptionSocial SciencesPsychologyGender StudiesBiasStereotypesTarget Facial CuesUnconscious BiasSocial IdentityCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesGeriatricsSocial CognitionGender StereotypePhotograph-stereotype Sorting TasksNeutral Facial ExpressionBody ImageLater AdulthoodOlder AdultsArts
This 2-part study used photograph-age and photograph-stereotype sorting tasks to examine the role of target facial cues in stereotyping of older persons. As predicted, young, middle-aged, and older participants associated photographs of those who looked older and those with a neutral facial expression with fewer positive stereotypes than other photographs. Participants also selected fewer positive stereotypes for photographs of women than of men, except when the photographs showed old-old (80 years and over) men. Participant age affected stereotyping only of the photographs of old-old persons, with older participants selecting fewer positive stereotypes for those photographs than middle-aged and young participants. These results establish the importance of facial cues in the age stereotyping process and suggest age boundaries for positive stereotypes of men and women.
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