- NASA's Spitzer telescope observes youngest brown dwarf ever observed
- Fuel vapour exposure increases road rage
- Exercise 'can cut stroke risk in men'
- 'Bubble fusion' hoax Indian origin scientist debarred from federal funding
- Now, a website to keep track of your family's medical history
- How peptides control crystal growth with 'switches, throttles and brakes'
Thinking that memory deteriorates with age may actually damage yours
Washington, April 22 (ANI): Think memory worsens with age? Then yours probably will, says a new study.
The study found that senior citizens who think older people should perform poorly on tests of memory actually score much worse than seniors who don't buy in to negative stereotypes about aging and memory loss.
-
E-mail Article
Printer Friendly
Text-Size

Lead author Dr. Tom Hess and his colleagues from North Carolina State University have shown that older adults' ability to remember suffers when negative stereotypes are 'activated' in a given situation.
"For example, older adults will perform more poorly on a memory test if they are told that older folks do poorly on that particular type of memory test," Hess said.
Memory also suffers if senior citizens believe they are being "stigmatized," meaning that others are looking down on them because of their age.
"Such situations may be a part of older adults' everyday experience, such as being concerned about what others think of them at work having a negative effect on their performance - and thus potentially reinforcing the negative stereotypes," Hess said.
However, Hess added: "The positive flip side of this is that those who do not feel stigmatized, or those in situations where more positive views of aging are activated, exhibit significantly higher levels of memory performance."
In other words, if you are confident that aging will not ravage your memory, you are more likely to perform well on memory-related tasks.
The study also found a couple of factors that influenced the extent to which negative stereotypes influence older adults.
For example, the researchers found that adults between the ages of 60 and 70 suffered more when these negative stereotypes were activated than seniors who were between the ages of 71 and 82. However, the 71-82 age group performed worse when they felt stigmatized.
Finally, the study found that negative effects were strongest for those older adults with the highest levels of education
"We interpret this as being consistent with the idea that those who value their ability to remember things most are the most likely to be sensitive to the negative implications of stereotypes, and thus are most likely to exhibit the problems associated with the stereotype," Hess said.
"The take-home message is that social factors may have a negative effect on older adults' memory performance," he added.
The study was published online April 1 by Experimental Aging Research. (ANI)
'Thinking outside the box' voted Britain's 'Most Despised Business Jargon'.
Thinking about sex can make people sneeze.
Thinking about popular songs can bring back old memories .
Thinking of other's causes may affect our own self-control .
Thinking that memory deteriorates with age may actually damage yours .



