Age differences in the correction processes of context-induced biases: when correction succeeds

Psychology and Aging
Mo Wang, Yiwei Chen

Abstract

Previous research has demonstrated that older adults are more susceptible than young adults to context-induced biases in social judgments. The primary goal of this study was to examine the conditions under which older adults could or could not correct their biases. Young and older adults completed a social judgment task that normally would produce contrast biases in 3 correction cue conditions: no cue, subtle cue, and blatant cue. It was found that both young and older adults corrected their biases in the blatant cue condition, but only young adults corrected in the subtle cue condition. The results suggest that older adults may need more environmental support in correcting their biases.

References

Mar 1, 1994·Journal of Gerontology·F Blanchard-Fields
Dec 1, 1999·Accident and Emergency Nursing·J Cioffi

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Citations

Oct 16, 2016·Attention, Perception & Psychophysics·Jessica K WittAllison A M Bielak
Oct 16, 2010·Journal of Applied Gerontology : the Official Journal of the Southern Gerontological Society·Kenneth S ShultzGwenith G Fisher

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