Author:
Grant Malcolm J.,Ross Abraham S.,Button Cathryn M.,Hannah T. Edward,Hoskins Rhoda
Abstract
In the first of two telephone-survey studies, factor analysis of the attitudes of 159 respondents revealed a general conservatism factor and two forms of liberalism, traditional and radical. Conservatism increased with age, traditional liberalism was strongest in women
and middleaged persons, and radical liberalism was stronger in men and decreased with age. In the second study, 240 respondents estimated the attitudes of a young, middle-aged, or old male or female target. Evidence of an “old-is-conservative” stereotype was clearest among young
participants. Among old participants, the stereotype was evident only when the target was male. People associated traditional liberalism more with women than with men and radical liberalism more with men than with women. Both kinds of liberalism were expected to decrease with age. The authors
conclude that age plays as important a role as gender in the attitude impressions people form during initial encounters.
Publisher
Scientific Journal Publishers Ltd
Cited by
21 articles.
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