Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes

Age attitudes and age stereotypes in the workplace can lead to discrimination and impaired productivity. Previous studies have predominantly assessed age stereotypes with explicit measures. However, sole explicit measurement is insufficient because of social desirability and potential inaccessibilit...

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Main Authors: Verena Kleissner, Georg Jahn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.579155/full
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spelling doaj-1d1443559cc144f6863ccbeeafbd15702020-11-25T02:45:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782020-10-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.579155579155Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age StereotypesVerena KleissnerGeorg JahnAge attitudes and age stereotypes in the workplace can lead to discrimination and impaired productivity. Previous studies have predominantly assessed age stereotypes with explicit measures. However, sole explicit measurement is insufficient because of social desirability and potential inaccessibility of stereotypical age evaluations to introspection. We aimed to advance the implicit and explicit assessment of work-related evaluations of age groups and age stereotypes and report data collected in three samples: students (n = 50), older adults (n = 53), and workers (n = 93). Evaluative age attitudes were measured implicitly with an Implicit Association Test. Regardless of group, age, and condition (neutral or semantically biased stimuli), the results confirm a stable, moderate implicitly measurable preference for younger over older workers. Whereas explicit measures of general age preferences showed no clear age preference, differentiated explicit measures of work-related age stereotypes also revealed stable preferences in all three samples: Younger workers were rated higher on performance and adaptability and older workers were rated higher on competence, reliability, and warmth. The explicit-implicit correlations were relatively low. Although explicit work-related age stereotypes are differentiated, the stable implicitly measured age bias raises concern. We suggest to apply implicit and explicit measures in the field of ageism in the workplace.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.579155/fullimplicit age attitudeworkplace ageismImplicit Association Testwork-related age stereotypesdimensions of age stereotypes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Verena Kleissner
Georg Jahn
spellingShingle Verena Kleissner
Georg Jahn
Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes
Frontiers in Psychology
implicit age attitude
workplace ageism
Implicit Association Test
work-related age stereotypes
dimensions of age stereotypes
author_facet Verena Kleissner
Georg Jahn
author_sort Verena Kleissner
title Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes
title_short Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes
title_full Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes
title_fullStr Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes
title_full_unstemmed Implicit and Explicit Measurement of Work-Related Age Attitudes and Age Stereotypes
title_sort implicit and explicit measurement of work-related age attitudes and age stereotypes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Age attitudes and age stereotypes in the workplace can lead to discrimination and impaired productivity. Previous studies have predominantly assessed age stereotypes with explicit measures. However, sole explicit measurement is insufficient because of social desirability and potential inaccessibility of stereotypical age evaluations to introspection. We aimed to advance the implicit and explicit assessment of work-related evaluations of age groups and age stereotypes and report data collected in three samples: students (n = 50), older adults (n = 53), and workers (n = 93). Evaluative age attitudes were measured implicitly with an Implicit Association Test. Regardless of group, age, and condition (neutral or semantically biased stimuli), the results confirm a stable, moderate implicitly measurable preference for younger over older workers. Whereas explicit measures of general age preferences showed no clear age preference, differentiated explicit measures of work-related age stereotypes also revealed stable preferences in all three samples: Younger workers were rated higher on performance and adaptability and older workers were rated higher on competence, reliability, and warmth. The explicit-implicit correlations were relatively low. Although explicit work-related age stereotypes are differentiated, the stable implicitly measured age bias raises concern. We suggest to apply implicit and explicit measures in the field of ageism in the workplace.
topic implicit age attitude
workplace ageism
Implicit Association Test
work-related age stereotypes
dimensions of age stereotypes
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.579155/full
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