Race and Gender-Based Perceptions of Older Septuagenarian Adults

Date
2022-11-14
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American English
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Mary Ann Liebert
Abstract

Objectives: Older adults face racism, sexism, and ageism. As the U.S. population ages, it is important to understand how the current population views older adults.

Methods: Participants recruited through Amazon's Mechanical Turk provided perceptions of older Black and White models' photographs. Using mixed-effect models, we assessed interactions between race and gender of participants and models.

Results: Among Participants of Color and White participants (n = 712, 70% non-Hispanic White, 70% women, mean 37.81 years), Black models were perceived as more attractive, less threatening, and sadder than White models, but differences were greater for White participants (race-by-race interaction: attractive p = 0.003, threatening p = 0.009, sad p = 0.016). Each gender perceived their respective gender as more attractive (gender-by-gender interaction p < 0.0001). Male and female participants perceived male models as happier than female models, but differences were greater for male participants (p = 0.026). Irrespective of participant age group, women were perceived as more threatening (p = 0.012). Other perceptions were not significant.

Discussion: Participants had few biases toward older Black and White models, while gender biases favored men.

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Melton F, Palmer K, Solola S, et al. Race and Gender-Based Perceptions of Older Septuagenarian Adults. Womens Health Rep (New Rochelle). 2022;3(1):944-956. Published 2022 Nov 14. doi:10.1089/whr.2022.0063
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Women's Health Reports
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