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      The influence of gender stereotype threat on mathematics test scores of Dutch high school students: a registered report

      1 , 1 , 1
      Comprehensive Results in Social Psychology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Stereotype Threat and Women's Math Performance

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            An integrated process model of stereotype threat effects on performance.

            Research showing that activation of negative stereotypes can impair the performance of stigmatized individuals on a wide variety of tasks has proliferated. However, a complete understanding of the processes underlying these stereotype threat effects on behavior is still lacking. The authors examine stereotype threat in the context of research on stress arousal, vigilance, working memory, and self-regulation to develop a process model of how negative stereotypes impair performance on cognitive and social tasks that require controlled processing, as well as sensorimotor tasks that require automatic processing. The authors argue that stereotype threat disrupts performance via 3 distinct, yet interrelated, mechanisms: (a) a physiological stress response that directly impairs prefrontal processing, (b) a tendency to actively monitor performance, and (c) efforts to suppress negative thoughts and emotions in the service of self-regulation. These mechanisms combine to consume executive resources needed to perform well on cognitive and social tasks. The active monitoring mechanism disrupts performance on sensorimotor tasks directly. Empirical evidence for these assertions is reviewed, and implications for interventions designed to alleviate stereotype threat are discussed.
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              An Agenda for Purely Confirmatory Research.

              The veracity of substantive research claims hinges on the way experimental data are collected and analyzed. In this article, we discuss an uncomfortable fact that threatens the core of psychology's academic enterprise: almost without exception, psychologists do not commit themselves to a method of data analysis before they see the actual data. It then becomes tempting to fine tune the analysis to the data in order to obtain a desired result-a procedure that invalidates the interpretation of the common statistical tests. The extent of the fine tuning varies widely across experiments and experimenters but is almost impossible for reviewers and readers to gauge. To remedy the situation, we propose that researchers preregister their studies and indicate in advance the analyses they intend to conduct. Only these analyses deserve the label "confirmatory," and only for these analyses are the common statistical tests valid. Other analyses can be carried out but these should be labeled "exploratory." We illustrate our proposal with a confirmatory replication attempt of a study on extrasensory perception.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Comprehensive Results in Social Psychology
                Comprehensive Results in Social Psychology
                Informa UK Limited
                2374-3603
                2374-3611
                January 30 2019
                January 30 2019
                : 1-35
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Methodology and Statistics, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands
                Article
                10.1080/23743603.2018.1559647
                f88454a8-e7d2-4908-87a9-4548bc3c922e
                © 2019
                History

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