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Journal Article

Citation

Hung S, Giles H, Moody J. Int. J. Aging Hum. Dev. 1991; 33(4): 269-277.

Affiliation

Psychology Department University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1991, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

1761316

Abstract

Age labels may lead to the seeking of age-stereotypic information from target individuals. Using Carver and de la Garza's information-seeking procedure (which asked respondents to judge the relative importance of various kinds of information they would glean from drivers involved in an automobile accident for assigning accident responsibility), but extending it to a wider life span (16 to 91 years of age) and to both genders, we generalized earlier findings to a similar undergraduate sample (n = 437) in another country. Also demonstrated for the first time is the fact that ageist information-seeking across the life span was independent of the driver's gender, the participant's age, and the participant's gender. Specifically, participants wanted to know from younger drivers about their driving conduct (whether they had been drunk and speeding), and from older drivers about their capacity for driving (mental competence, vision, and health). The seeking of environmental information (car safety and road conditions) did not vary with the age of driver in any systematic way.


Language: en

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