Americans harbor much less favorable explicit sentiments toward young adults than toward older adults
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Francioli, Stephane P.; Shakeri, Angela; North, Michael S.
署名单位:
University of Pennsylvania; New York University
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-8850
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2311009121
发表日期:
2024-06-25
关键词:
social-dominance orientation
age stereotypes
attitudes
DISCRIMINATION
pervasiveness
perceptions
PSYCHOLOGY
prediction
cognition
GENDER
摘要:
Public and academic discourse on ageism focuses primarily on prejudices targeting older adults, implicitly assuming that this age group experiences the most age bias. We test this assumption in a large, preregistered study surveying Americans' explicit sentiments toward young, middle - aged, and older adults. Contrary to certain expectations about the scope and nature of ageism, responses from two crowdsourced online samples matched to the US adult population ( N = 1,820) revealed that older adults garner the most favorable sentiments and young adults, the least favorable ones. This pattern held across a wide range of participant demographics and outcome variables, in both samples. Signaling derogation of young adults more than benign liking of older adults, participants high on SDO (i.e., a key antecedent of group prejudice) expressed even less favorable sentiments toward young adults-and more favorable ones toward older adults. In two follow - up, preregistered, forecasting surveys, lay participants ( N = 500) were generally quite accurate at predicting these results; in contrast, social scientists ( N = 241) underestimated how unfavorably respondents viewed young adults and how favorably they viewed older adults. In fact, the more expertise in ageism scientists had, the more biased their forecasts. In a rapidly aging world with exacerbated concerns over older adults' welfare, young adults also face increasing economic, social, political, and ecological hardship. Our findings highlight the need for policymakers and social scientists to broaden their understanding of age biases and develop theory and policies that ponder discriminations targeting all age groups.
来源URL: