Stereotypes can improve as well as thwart our likelihood of success say researchers.
Researchers from the University of Exeter and St Andrews University have shown that stereotypes can improve as well as thwart our likelihood of success.
The research team argues that the power of stereotypes to influence our performance should not be taken too lightly.Drawing on a large body of research, the authors argue that success or failure at work, at school or in sport cannot always be attributed exclusively to ability or incompetence.
Studies suggesting that gender or race can play a part in performance have proved controversial. The researchers argue that the roots of such handicaps lie partly in the preconceptions that other people hold about these groups. For example, a woman who has been led to believe that women generally do worse than men at mathematics, will perform less well in a maths test as a result.
However, the researchers also indicate that stereotypes can have positive dimensions that are able to boost individual or group's performance. For example, research has shown that Asian women do better on maths tests if they identify themselves as Asian rather than as women.
Another study has shown that white golfers tend to perform better against black opponents if they are told that they are being judged on their "sport strategic intelligence" than if they are told they are being tested on their "natural athletic ability."
"The power of stereotypes should not be underestimated. What we think about ourselves - and also, what we believe others think about us - determines both how we perform and what we are able to become," said Professor Alex Haslam of the University of Exeter.
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While we're often told "believe in yourself", it can actually be more beneficial to focus on beliefs about your group, as group identity is a powerful vehicle for both personal and social change," he added.
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Professor Stephen Reicher of St Andrews University commented: "In many ways our stereotype of the stereotype is wrong. Stereotypes are neither fixed, nor necessarily harmful. Indeed, in our own hands, they can be tools of progress".
The study appears in the new edition of Scientific American Mind.
Source-ANI
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