keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38059951/following-community-norms-or-an-internal-compass-the-role-of-prospective-leaders-social-category-membership-in-the-differential-effects-of-authentic-and-ethical-leadership-on-stereotype-threat
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Urszula Lagowska, Filipe Sobral, Jorge Jacob, Andrew C Hafenbrack, Rafael Goldszmidt
Increasing racial diversity in organizations remains a challenge, as stereotype threat undermines the performance and career aspirations of minority group members during job recruitment. The present study examines how prospective leaders can leverage their influence on their followers' identities to mitigate the stereotype threat Black individuals face in this context. We explore the effects of two moral leadership styles (ethical vs. authentic) on stereotype threat in the context of recruitment. Specifically, we investigate whether prospective leaders' ingroup status moderates the relationship between ethical versus authentic leadership styles and candidates' stereotype threat during the selection process and candidates' willingness to join the organization...
December 7, 2023: Journal of Applied Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38041951/microaggressions-in-veterinary-communication-what-are-they-how-are-they-harmful-what-can-veterinary-professionals-and-educators-do
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naomi W Nishi, Mary Jane Collier, Gabriela I Morales, Erin Watley
Trusting relationships between veterinary professionals and clients are important for the well-being of people and the ultimate health of their animals. Yet, microaggressions pose a threat to these relationships. Defined as slights or indignities wielded against people with marginalized identities, microaggressions inflict a unique form of harm that reaffirms negative stereotypes enmeshed in systems of racism, sexism, classism, and beyond. In this article, we explore how microaggressions work and how they are applicable in veterinary settings...
December 1, 2023: Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38022797/pathogen-disgust-is-associated-with-interpersonal-bias-among-healthcare-professionals
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anastasia Makhanova, W Allen Lambert, Ryan Blanchard, Joe Alcock, Eric C Shattuck, Michael P Wilson
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Pathogen avoidance is a fundamental motive that shapes many aspects of human behavior including bias against groups stereotypically linked to disease (e.g. immigrants, outgroup members). This link has only been examined in convenience samples and it is unknown how pathogen avoidance processes operate in populations experiencing prolonged and heightened pathogen threat such as healthcare professionals. We examined whether healthcare professionals demonstrate the same link between pathogen disgust and intergroup bias as has been documented among the general population...
2023: Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38010875/dressing-up-social-psychology-empirically-investigating-the-psychological-functions-of-clothing-using-the-example-of-symbolic-protection
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Gruber, Michael Häfner, Sven Kachel
Clothing behaviour remains an understudied research area within social psychology. Through the present research, we aim to anchor attire as an empirical research subject by investigating the psychological properties of one of its functionalities, namely, to provide protection. We argue that attire's undisputed role in shielding humans from environmental hazards may extend to the psychological level and protect them from the incorporeal consequences of existential threats symbolically. In this Registered Report, a mixed-methods approach links an ecologically valid field study of self-presentation in social media posts during Russia's war on Ukraine (Study 1; N = 248) with supraliminal priming of mortality salience in an online experiment (Study 2; N = 248)...
November 27, 2023: British Journal of Social Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37985610/stereotype-threat-and-gender-bias-in-internal-medicine-residency-it-is-still-hard-to-be-in-charge
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Annabel K Frank, Jackie J Lin, Sophia Bellin Warren, Justin L Bullock, Patricia O'Sullivan, Lauren E Malishchak, Rebecca A Berman, Maria A Yialamas, Karen E Hauer
BACKGROUND: Despite similar numbers of women and men in internal medicine (IM) residency, women face unique challenges. Stereotype threat is hypothesized to contribute to underrepresentation of women in academic leadership, and exploring how it manifests in residency may provide insight into forces that perpetuate gender disparities. OBJECTIVE: To quantify the prevalence of stereotype threat in IM residency and explore experiences contributing to that stereotype threat...
November 20, 2023: Journal of General Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37973771/overcoming-age-differences-in-memory-retrieval-by-reducing-stereotype-threat
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marie Mazerolle, Lucas Rotolo, François Maquestiaux
Very little is known about whether and how socioemotional factors influence age differences in associative memory. Here, we tested the hypothesis that reducing the threat induced by age-based stereotypes can reduce age differences in learning performance and strategy. Using an associative learning task, we replicated the classic finding of age differences under a high-threat condition: older adults had longer reaction times than younger adults and were much more reluctant to use memory retrieval. However, age differences were greatly diminished under a low-threat condition...
November 16, 2023: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37941378/can-stereotype-threat-and-lift-visual-messages-affect-subsequent-physical-activity-evidence-from-a-controlled-experiment-using-accelerometers
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Camren L Allen, Enoch Montes, Troy Hoang, Therek Romo, Jorge Peña, Jessica Navarro
This study investigated how visual messages conveying stereotype threat or lift influenced physical activity performance. Participants ( N  = 380) were exposed to a stereotype threat, lift, or control condition image and then engaged in a running task. Accelerometers recorded forward-backward movement, upward-downward movement, and sideways balance. Stereotype threat exposure increased state anxiety relative to the control condition. In addition, forward-backward movement was linked to state anxiety and participants' sex...
November 8, 2023: Health Communication
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37910481/political-context-and-immigrants-work-related-performance-errors-insights-from-the-national-basketball-association
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin A Korman, Florian Kunze
In numerous countries, both international migration and regional support for far-right political parties are on the rise. This is important considering that a frequent aim of far-right political parties is to aggressively limit the inflow of immigrants. Understanding how regional far-right political support affects the immigrants working in these regions is therefore vital for executives and organizations as a whole. Integrating political science research at the macro-level with stereotype threat theory at the individual level, we argue that regional far-right political support makes negative immigrant stereotypes salient, increasing the number of work-related performance errors conducted by immigrants while reducing those by natives...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37905532/health-care-stereotype-threat-and-sexual-and-gender-minority-well-being
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
R Kyle Saunders, Dawn C Carr, Amy M Burdette
Sexual and gender minorities (SGMs) have experienced progressive change over the last 50 years. However, this group still reports worse health and health care experiences. An innovative survey instrument that applies stereotype threat to the health care setting, health care stereotype threat (HCST), offers a new avenue to examine these disparities. We harmonized two national probability data sets of SGMs-Generations and TransPop-capturing 503 gay men, 297 lesbians, 467 bisexuals, and 221 trans people...
October 31, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37883432/large-language-models-show-human-like-content-biases-in-transmission-chain-experiments
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alberto Acerbi, Joseph M Stubbersfield
As the use of large language models (LLMs) grows, it is important to examine whether they exhibit biases in their output. Research in cultural evolution, using transmission chain experiments, demonstrates that humans have biases to attend to, remember, and transmit some types of content over others. Here, in five preregistered experiments using material from previous studies with human participants, we use the same, transmission chain-like methodology, and find that the LLM ChatGPT-3 shows biases analogous to humans for content that is gender-stereotype-consistent, social, negative, threat-related, and biologically counterintuitive, over other content...
October 31, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37864468/adding-fuel-to-the-collective-fire-stereotype-threat-solidarity-and-support-for-change
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Clarissa I Cortland, Zoe Kinias
We hypothesize a yet-unstudied effect of experiencing systemic stereotype threat on women's collective action efforts: igniting women's support for other women and motivation to improve organizational gender balance. Hypotheses are supported in two surveys (Study 1: N = 1,365 business school alumnae; Study 2: N = 386 women Master of Business Administration [MBA]), and four experiments (Studies 3-6; total N = 1,897 working women). Studies 1 and 2 demonstrate that experiencing stereotype threat is negatively associated with women's domain-relevant engagement (supporting extant work on the negative effects of stereotype threat), but positively associated with women's support and advocacy of gender balance...
October 21, 2023: Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37817025/cognitive-perspectives-on-maintaining-physicians-medical-expertise-v-using-a-motivational-framework-to-understand-the-benefits-and-costs-of-testing
#32
REVIEW
Timothy J Nokes-Malach, Scott H Fraundorf, Zachary A Caddick, Benjamin M Rottman
We apply a motivational perspective to understand the implications of physicians' longitudinal assessment. We review the literature on situated expectancy-value theory, achievement goals, mindsets, anxiety, and stereotype threat in relation to testing and assessment. This review suggests several motivational benefits of testing as well as some potential challenges and costs posed by high-stakes, standardized tests. Many of the motivational benefits for testing can be understood from the equation of having the perceived benefits of the test outweigh the perceived costs of preparing for and taking the assessment...
October 10, 2023: Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37747853/neighborhood-ethnic-composition-and-social-identity-threat-the-mediating-role-of-perceived-discrimination
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriel Camacho, Diane M Quinn
Ethnic proportions of neighborhoods are a "macro" measure of intergroup contact and can buffer or expose people of color to discrimination. Simultaneously, perceived discrimination can sensitize students of color to social identity threat in environments in which they are numerically underrepresented and negatively stereotyped. In the current research, we integrate these two lines of research to examine whether neighborhood ethnic composition - the percentage of Latinx residents in one's home community - predicts social identity threat for Latinx students attending college at a predominately White institution (PWI)...
September 25, 2023: Journal of Social Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37732959/stereotype-threat-contributes-to-poorer-recall-performance-among-undergraduate-students-with-problematic-drinking-patterns
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha Johnstone, Kesia Courtenay, Todd A Girard
Stereotype threat occurs when individuals from stigmatized groups feel they are expected to conform to a negative stereotype associated with their group. Studies show that activating stereotype threat can impair performance on cognitive tasks in various marginalized groups. Individuals with problematic alcohol use are subject to stigmatized views related to cognitive abilities and socialization skills; thus, we examine for the first time whether eliciting stereotype threat impairs performance on a memory and a theory of mind task in undergraduate students with varying drinking patterns...
September 21, 2023: Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37693329/randomised-controlled-trial-of-self-affirmation-intervention-on-students-academic-performance-promising-impacts-on-students-from-migrant-hukou-status
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jilong Yang, Yue Zhao, Yuexin Ji, Jiaxin Ma, Lanyu Li, Xiaoyong Hu
PURPOSE: Drawing from the sociocultural-self model, this study aims to examine the influence of self-affirmation on the academic outcomes of lower-class migrant students, as well as the psychological mechanism underlying this phenomenon. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A field experiment was conducted at a comprehensive secondary school in the southern region of China. Our study sample comprised 1534 immigrant students from diverse regions across the country, with an average proportion of 59...
2023: Psychology Research and Behavior Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37691797/effects-of-attachment-security-priming-on-women-s-math-performance
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Antonio Soares De Almeida, Omri Gillath, Rotem Kahalon, Nurit Shnabel
INTRODUCTION: Activating people's sense of attachment security can buffer against psychological threats. Here we tested whether security priming can also buffer the adverse effects of stereotype threat among women. METHOD: Three studies (a pilot study ( N = 79 women, 72 men), a laboratory study; N = 474 women, and an online study; N = 827 women) compared security priming to neutral and positive affect priming. RESULTS: The pilot study revealed that women exposed to attachment security primes (e...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37667263/cuticular-competing-endogenous-rnas-regulate-insecticide-penetration-and-resistance-in-a-major-agricultural-pest
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Li-Wei Meng, Guo-Rui Yuan, Meng-Ling Chen, Li-Sha Zheng, Wei Dou, Yu Peng, Wen-Jie Bai, Zhen-Yu Li, John Vontas, Jin-Jun Wang
BACKGROUND: The continuously developing pesticide resistance is a great threat to agriculture and human health. Understanding the mechanisms of insecticide resistance is a key step in dealing with the phenomenon. Insect cuticle is recently documented to delay xenobiotic penetration which breaks the previous stereotype that cuticle is useless in insecticide resistance, while the underlying mechanism remains scarce. RESULTS: Here, we find the integument contributes over 40...
September 5, 2023: BMC Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37665818/effect-of-a-sex-stereotype-on-cortical-activity-during-a-self-paced-exercise-a-motor-related-cortical-potential-approach
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maxime Deshayes, Corentin Clément-Guillotin, Gauthier Denis, Jonathan Bredin, Rémi Radel, Raphaël Zory
Recent research has shown that inducing a negative stereotype toward women does not always decrease the subsequent motor performance of women, but can increase it, especially during endurance tasks. The mechanisms involved are nonetheless still poorly understood. The main aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of a negative stereotype toward women on men's and women's performance during an endurance task, and to analyze the neuropsychological mechanisms involved through motor-related cortical potentials and motivation toward men/women...
January 2023: Psychology of Sport and Exercise
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37650797/experiencing-daily-negative-aging-stereotypes-and-real-life-cognitive-functioning-in-older-adults-a-diary-study
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuting Ma, Baoshan Zhang, Xin Zhang, Yibo Hu
Older adults may be confronted with a variety of negative aging stereotypes (e.g., "forgetful," "physically frail," and "lonely") almost every day. While experimental studies have demonstrated the impact of negative aging stereotypes on older adults' cognitive performance, the relationship between multiple negative aging stereotype experiences and cognitive functioning in older people's daily lives is largely unknown. Using a 1-week daily diary study approach, the present studies examined the association between experiencing daily negative aging stereotypes and real-life cognitive functioning and the mediating role of daily negative affect...
August 31, 2023: Psychology and Aging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37637314/behavioral-and-endocrine-responses-to-noninteractive-live-and-video-conspecifics-in-males-of-the-siamese-fighting-fish
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deepa Alex, Sara D Cardoso, Andreia Ramos, David Gonçalves
The physiological mechanisms underlying variation in aggression in fish remain poorly understood. One possibly confounding variable is the lack of standardization in the type of stimuli used to elicit aggression. The presentation of controlled stimuli in videos, a.k.a. video playback, can provide better control of the fight components. However, this technique has produced conflicting results in animal behavior studies and needs to be carefully validated. For this, a similar response to the video and an equivalent live stimulus needs to be demonstrated...
October 2023: Current Zoology
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