Ageist Stereotype Threat Effects on Memory and Metacognition in Older Adults

Ageist Stereotype Threat Effects on Memory and Metacognition in Older Adults

Author: Jessica T. Wong

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 120

ISBN-13: 9781303423710

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Ageist stereotype threat reduces episodic memory accuracy in older adults, but less is known how stereotype threat affects other memory domains or the cognitive mechanisms that may underlie these effects. The goal of this dissertation was to explore how stereotype threat impacts episodic, semantic, and working memory, and the potential role of metacognition. Experiment 1 manipulated stereotype threat at retrieval during an episodic memory task, and also required older adults to complete semantic and working memory tasks under stereotype threat. For the episodic task, older adults under threat had lower recognition for studied items and semantically related nonstudied items than age-matched controls, implicating a conservative criterion shift. Threat did not affect semantic or working memory measures. Experiment 2 tested the generality of these effects using three different cognitive tests, and also manipulated stereotype threat at both encoding and retrieval for the episodic test. Threat at encoding increased source recollection confusions compared to controls, but threat at retrieval did not. Threat again failed to affect semantic memory, but sometimes impaired working memory. Metacognitive ratings were affected by both stereotype threat and task performance, but these effects depended on the format of the questionnaires. Taken together, these results suggest that ageist stereotype threat can differentially affect episodic memory at both encoding and retrieval, although these effects were not mediated by metacognition.


Effects of Age- Related Stereotype Threat on Memory and Executive Function

Effects of Age- Related Stereotype Threat on Memory and Executive Function

Author: Natasha Y. Fourquet

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 74

ISBN-13:

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Recall performance is greatly affected when older adults are presented with stereotype threat regarding memory (See Lamont et al., 2015 for a review). Stereotype threat is a concern that one's performance will confirm negative stereotypes about one's group. In Study 1 (Chapter 2), we examined the effect of threat on metamemory processes and memory selectivity for high value information. Our findings showed that threat affected calibration (i.e., bets-recall, p=.045) and total score (p=.03), both which require metacognitive control. Our threat manipulation did not affect value. That is, both groups placed bets and recalled more high-value words than low and medium value words (p>.05). Metacognition goes hand in hand with executive control, thus it is possible that threat burdened both cognitive processes. Moreover, the effect of value was stronger than that of threat. In Study 2 (Chapter 3), we were interested in testing the effect of threat when the manipulation was done after encoding (i.e., prior to retrieval). We found no differences across groups in free recall or cued recall with this manipulation. However, we cannot refute the plausible effect of threat on retrieval given differences in experimental conditions (i.e., encoding time) between the current study and previous research. Taken together, our results provide partial support for executive function (See Chapter 2) as a possible mechanism of stereotype threat's effect on memory performance. We were interested in contributing to the growing body of literature on the cognitive mechanisms that underlie this disruption in performance. Study 3 (Chapter 4) aimed to assess the effect of different types of threat on executive function. Older adults were assigned to one of three conditions: a neutral, memory threat, or processing speed threat condition. Participants completed a task-switching paradigm, in which global, local, and alternating switch costs were examined. Reaction time and accuracy were used as dependent measures. Overall, participants displayed a pattern of performance that is consistent with the task switching literature. That is, older adults showed global and local switch costs (e.g., Mayr, 2001). Participants in the memory threat condition did not differ greatly from those in the neutral condition, while participants in the processing speed threat condition were significantly faster than the other two groups, (p=.03). We did not observe an interaction between trial type and group for local switch costs (p>.05). Group differences only emerged for global switch trials. It is possible that our processing speed threat manipulation may have prompted a reminder about the objective of the task. Taken together, incorporating value-based tasks into neuropsychological assessments would provide an improved objective measure of memory performance. Also, as suggested by Study 3 deemphasizing memory prior to a task of executive function may improve performance.


Memory and Aging

Memory and Aging

Author: Moshe Naveh-Benjamin

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2012-05-04

Total Pages: 441

ISBN-13: 1136583025

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Current demographical patterns predict an aging worldwide population. It is projected that by 2050, more than 20% of the US population and 40% of the Japanese population will be older than 65. A dramatic increase in research on memory and aging has emerged to understand the age-related changes in memory since the ability to learn new information and retrieve previously learned information is essential for successful aging, and allows older adults to adapt to changes in their environment, self-concept, and social roles. This volume represents the latest psychological research on different aspects of age-related changes in memory. Written by a group of leading international researchers, its chapters cover a broad array of issues concerning the changes that occur in memory as people grow older, including the mechanisms and processes underlying these age-related memory changes, how these changes interact with social and cultural environments, and potential programs intended to increase memory performance in old age. Similarly, the chapters draw upon diverse methodological approaches, including cross-cultural extreme group experimental designs, longitudinal designs assessing intra-participant change, and computational approaches and neuroimaging assessment. Together, they provide converging evidence for stability and change in memory as people grow older, for the underlying causes of these patterns, as well as for the heterogeneity in older adults’ performance. Memory and Aging is essential reading for researchers in memory, cognitive aging, and gerontology.


Stereotypes, Attitudes about Aging, and Optimism and Their Impacts on Vocabulary Performance:

Stereotypes, Attitudes about Aging, and Optimism and Their Impacts on Vocabulary Performance:

Author: Caitlin Tyrrell

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 125

ISBN-13:

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Age-related attitudes and stereotypes about aging have been shown to impact a variety of outcomes, including older adults’ cognitive performance. Past research has often focused on memory, a variable which does show age-related decline. The present research explored the relationship of such attitudes and stereotypes with vocabulary, a novel outcome variable in this area that differs from memory in that it remains stable well into older adulthood. Study 1 used data from 3631 participants in a large data set to explore the ability of attitudinal variables (i.e., aging satisfaction, aging expectations, and optimism) to predict vocabulary performance. Optimism was the only statistically significant attitudinal predictor of vocabulary, though it did not have strong practical significance. Study 2 was designed to test the impacts of experimentally manipulated age-based stereotype threat on vocabulary performance and confidence in vocabulary performance in 71 young adults and 74 older adults. Participants were presented with a stereotype threat manipulation stating that their age group was either expected to do better or worse on vocabulary performance than the other age group. Older adults performed better on the vocabulary task and were more confident in their performance, consistent with past findings. However, the hypothesized effect of stereotype threat on older adults’ vocabulary performance, related to young adults’, was not found. Interpretation of the impact of stereotype threat is limited, however, as many participants did not accurately respond to a manipulation check item. Overall, this research did not support a relationship between age-related attitudes, optimism, age-based stereotypes, and vocabulary performance.


Effect of Aging Stereotype Activation on Older Adults' Memory and Neural Activity

Effect of Aging Stereotype Activation on Older Adults' Memory and Neural Activity

Author: Yung Tsen Chen

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 171

ISBN-13: 9780438370494

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Ageist stereotype threat can impact older adults' cognitive ability, including memory performance, but the mechanisms underlying these effects are poorly understood. In this dissertation, I used behavioral tasks, physiological measurement, and brain imaging (fMRI) to identify the mechanisms underlying ageist stereotype effects in older adults. A large sample of cognitively normal older adults (mean age = 63.6) was randomly assigned to either a stereotype activation or control group. On the first day (baseline) all participants completed episodic and working memory tasks, and on the second day I gave instructions explicitly activating aging stereotypes (or a control passage) just before they took these same tests during fMRI brain scanning. There were three primary findings. First, although there was no overall stereotype effect on working memory or episodic memory performance, regression analyses based on prior work indicated that education and retirement status moderated the impact of stereotype activation on episodic memory performance. Second, self-report measures as well as physiological measures (e.g., heart rate variability) revealed that the stereotype manipulation did not increase anxiety or stress. These and other findings indicate that stereotype activation in the fMRI environment did not cause an extreme threat or emotional response in older adults, but may have instead motivated some of them to differentially engage the tasks than others. Lastly, using whole-brain fMRI and targeted Region-of-Interest (ROI) analyses, I found that stereotype activation increased activity in the superior and middle temporal gyrus, which have previously been associated with emotion regulation, as well as posterior midline regions (e.g., mid-cingulate, posterior cingulate cortex and precuneus), which have previously been associated with processing stereotype threat and self-referential thoughts. Stereotype activation also altered functional connectivity between these regions and prefrontal regions associated with self-relevant ideas and attentional focus (e.g., anterior prefrontal cortex and orbitofrontal cortex/ventromedial prefrontal cortex). These fMRI results are consistent with a motivational shift hypothesis, or the idea that aging stereotypes cause older adults to engage self-referential thought and a prevention-focused response style (i.e., trying harder to avoid losses and prevent errors). As a whole, these results demonstrate for the first time that stereotype activation can impact neural activity in older adults, even in the absence of large behavioral effects. This work emphasizes the importance of minimizing even the mildest stereotype threat in clinical settings aiming to use fMRI to help diagnose memory problems in older adults, as a stereotyping environment can significantly impact the test results.


The Influence Of Token Status Induced Stereotype Threat On Memory Performance In Older Adults

The Influence Of Token Status Induced Stereotype Threat On Memory Performance In Older Adults

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The purpose of the proposed research was to investigate how contextual features of a situation affect cognitive performance. Specifically, this research explored the role that a social characteristic of the testing situation, group composition, had on memory performance. The study tested older adults (N=72) between the ages of 65 and 75 who were evenly divided into three testing conditions. In the minority status condition, one older adult was tested with two younger adult confederates whereas in the majority status condition, older adults were tested with two similarly aged individuals. The third condition involved individualized testing. It was expected that older adults would experience stereotype threat in the minority status condition and that this would result in poorer performance on a memory task relative to those in the majority status and alone conditions. Contrary to expectations, memory performance did not significantly differ between the three conditions, providing no support for the hypothesis that group composition at testing would be related to stereotype threat . In addition, no evidence was found that the hypothesized moderators (stigma consciousness, value placed on memory) and mediators (anxiety, evaluation apprehension, strategy use) were related to threat-based effects.


The Effects of Stereotype Threat on the Associative Memory Deficit of Older Adults

The Effects of Stereotype Threat on the Associative Memory Deficit of Older Adults

Author: Matthew S. Brubaker

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 92

ISBN-13:

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One of the suggestions made in the literature regarding older adults' episodic memory decline is that it is caused by their reduced ability to bind together components of an episode and retrieve the binding (termed an associative deficit). The purpose of the current research is to assess whether the age-related associative memory deficit is at least partially mediated by stereotype threat, which has been shown to negatively affect performance on a wide variety of cognitive tasks, including memory performance of older adults. To date the effects of stereotype threat on older adults' memory performance have only been shown using tests of item memory, and between subject manipulations. The question assessed in the current research is whether older adults' associative memory will be affected by stereotype threat more than item memory, rendering it one potential factor underlying the associative deficit. To answer this question, three experiments were conducted, which used an item-associative recognition memory paradigm while manipulating stereotype threat both within and between subjects. The first two experiments attempted to establish the baseline effect by directly comparing item and associative memory in younger and older adults under induced stereotype threat, reduced stereotype threat, and no stereotype threat (i.e. control) conditions. While a baseline age-related associative deficit was not shown in the control condition, inducing stereotype threat did have a significant negative effect on older adults' associative memory performance without affecting item memory performance—suggesting that stereotype threat does increase the age-related associative deficit. The third experiment further assessed the stage of processing— encoding, retrieval, or both—during which the effect of stereotype threat on older adults' memory occurs. Results showed that when stereotype threat was induced only at retrieval, memory performance was in line with performance with the reduced stereotype threat and control conditions, suggesting that this effect of stereotype threat occurs primarily during encoding of the information.


Stereotype Threat and Mind-wandering in Older Adults

Stereotype Threat and Mind-wandering in Older Adults

Author: Megan L. Jordano

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 159

ISBN-13:

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"Research on aging and mind-wandering has revealed that, while older adults report fewer mind-wandering episodes than do younger adults, they report proportionally more task-related interference (TRI; mind-wandering about task performance or approach), whereas younger adults report proportionally more task-unrelated thoughts (TUTs). It is possible that stereotype threat (ST) acts as a mind-wandering trigger in older adults by priming cognitive concerns, leading to increased TRI. In this experiment, a sample of 90 older adults was divided into three groups: a group primed for memory-related ST, a group relieved of memory-related ST, and a control group that received no ST intervention. A sample of 30 younger adults was also included. Participants completed an automated operation span task (OSPAN) with set sizes varying between 3-5 letters to be recalled. During the OSPAN participants were probed for mind-wandering episodes. Consistent with past findings, younger adults reported a mean proportion of TUT reports that was significantly higher than those of all three older adult groups. Likewise, the younger adult group had a mean proportion of TRI reports that was significantly lower than those of all three older adult groups. Older adults primed for ST reported significantly more TRI than older adults relieved of ST, but not significantly more TRI than control older adults. However, control older adults did not report significantly more TRI than older adults relieved of ST. These results were consistent with our hypothesis that stereotype threat may act as a mind-wandering trigger in older adults."--Abstract from author supplied metadata.


The Influence of Stereotype Threat on Prospective Memory in Middle and Late Adulthood

The Influence of Stereotype Threat on Prospective Memory in Middle and Late Adulthood

Author: Sherrie L. Parks

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 306

ISBN-13:

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Prospective memory, memory to perform future intended actions, is an important component of independent living for older adults. The current study examined prospective memory performance in 120 adults (Young-Old; 45-64 years old and Old; 65 - 87 years old) using Virtual Week (Rendell & Craik, 2000; Rendell & Henry, 2009). Virtual week was used to assess performance for regular and irregular event based, regular and irregular time based, and time check prospective memory tasks. Prospective memory performance under conditions of stereotype threat, stereotype boost, and a neutral condition was also examined. Stereotype threat occurs when individuals fear their behavior will confirm a negative opinion regarding one’s in-group. Older adults completed fewer prospective memory tasks compared to participants in the Young-Old group. No effect of stereotype condition on completion of prospective memory tasks was observed. The implication that stereotype threat may influence memory systems differently, as well as the possible role of the positivity effect on performance is considered.