a School of Psychology , University of Aberdeen , Aberdeen , UK.
Cogn Emot. 2014 Apr;28(3):493-506. doi: 10.1080/02699931.2013.839438. Epub 2013 Nov 28.
The present study explored own-age biases in deception detection, investigating whether individuals were more likely to trust those in their own-age group. Younger and older participants were asked to detect deceit from videos of younger and older speakers, rating their confidence in each decision. Older participants showed an own-age bias: they were more likely to think that deceptive speakers of their own age, relative to younger speakers, were telling the truth. Older participants were also more confident in their judgements of own-age, relative to other-age, speakers. There were no own-age biases for younger participants. In a subsequent (apparently unrelated) task, participants were asked to rate the trustworthiness of the speakers. Both age groups of participants trusted younger speakers who had previously told the truth more compared to those who had lied. This effect was not found for older speakers. These findings are considered in relation to the in-group/out-group model of social cognition and common stereotypical beliefs held about younger and older adults.
本研究探讨了欺骗检测中的同年龄偏见,即个体是否更倾向于信任同年龄群体中的人。年轻组和老年组参与者被要求从年轻和年长演讲者的视频中检测欺骗行为,并对每个决策的信心进行评分。老年参与者表现出同年龄偏见:与年轻演讲者相比,他们更倾向于认为自己年龄组中欺骗性的演讲者说实话。与其他年龄组的演讲者相比,老年参与者对自己年龄组的判断更有信心。年轻参与者则没有同年龄偏见。在随后的(看似不相关的)任务中,参与者被要求对演讲者的可信度进行评分。与说谎者相比,两组参与者都更信任之前说实话的年轻演讲者。对于年长的演讲者则没有发现这种效果。这些发现与社会认知的内群体/外群体模型以及对年轻和年长成年人的常见刻板印象有关。