Women's stereotype threat-based performance motivation and prepotent inhibitory ability
Women's stereotype threat-based performance motivation and prepotent inhibitory ability
According to the mere effort account of performance, stereotype threat motivates disproval of the negative performance stereotype, which in turn potentiates the overproduction of prepotent responses. In mathematics (maths), prepotent responding facilitates solve type question (e.g., equations) performance, but reduces comparison type question (e.g., estimations) performance. Problematically, the mere effort account indexes performance motivation as task performance. Also, this account posits that performance reduction on non-prepotent tasks derives from the overproduction of prepotent responses, as opposed to failed inhibition of prepotent responses associated with the alternative, namely, the working memory interference perspective. We investigated motivational and prepotent responding as applied to stereotype threat. In Experiment 1, a maths question selection task indexed motivation (independently of performance). Stereotype threat led female test takers to select more solve than comparison maths questions, in accord with the mere effort account. In Experiment 2, higher inhibitory ability protected overall maths performance following stereotype threat, but it did not protect non-prepotentiated comparison question performance (inconsistent with the working memory interference perspective). The results support the mere effort account.
inhibition, maths, motivation, performance, stereotype threat
Hutter, Russell C.
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Davies, Lucy C.
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Sedikides, Constantine
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Conner, Mark
32953853-b09b-44cf-9fc0-7bed9f469a0b
Hutter, Russell C.
fe9bd293-6f86-44cb-b92c-e894521c3093
Davies, Lucy C.
a998798e-a0f8-4797-808d-52d1b63195dc
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Conner, Mark
32953853-b09b-44cf-9fc0-7bed9f469a0b
Hutter, Russell C., Davies, Lucy C., Sedikides, Constantine and Conner, Mark
(2018)
Women's stereotype threat-based performance motivation and prepotent inhibitory ability.
British Journal of Social Psychology.
(doi:10.1111/bjso.12298).
Abstract
According to the mere effort account of performance, stereotype threat motivates disproval of the negative performance stereotype, which in turn potentiates the overproduction of prepotent responses. In mathematics (maths), prepotent responding facilitates solve type question (e.g., equations) performance, but reduces comparison type question (e.g., estimations) performance. Problematically, the mere effort account indexes performance motivation as task performance. Also, this account posits that performance reduction on non-prepotent tasks derives from the overproduction of prepotent responses, as opposed to failed inhibition of prepotent responses associated with the alternative, namely, the working memory interference perspective. We investigated motivational and prepotent responding as applied to stereotype threat. In Experiment 1, a maths question selection task indexed motivation (independently of performance). Stereotype threat led female test takers to select more solve than comparison maths questions, in accord with the mere effort account. In Experiment 2, higher inhibitory ability protected overall maths performance following stereotype threat, but it did not protect non-prepotentiated comparison question performance (inconsistent with the working memory interference perspective). The results support the mere effort account.
Text
Hutter Davies Sedikides Conner 2018.puredocx
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 November 2018
Keywords:
inhibition, maths, motivation, performance, stereotype threat
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Local EPrints ID: 427456
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/427456
PURE UUID: 97269982-4b5e-4df5-b868-14a16c05d8a9
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Date deposited: 16 Jan 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:14
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Author:
Russell C. Hutter
Author:
Lucy C. Davies
Author:
Mark Conner
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