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Dive into the research topics where Michael Johns is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Johns.


Psychological Review | 2008

An Integrated Process Model of Stereotype Threat Effects on Performance

Toni Schmader; Michael Johns; Chad E. Forbes

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.


Psychological Science | 2005

Knowing Is Half the Battle Teaching Stereotype Threat as a Means of Improving Women's Math Performance

Michael Johns; Toni Schmader; Andy Martens

We tested whether informing women about stereotype threat is a useful intervention to improve their performance in a threatening testing situation. Men and women completed difficult math problems described either as a problem-solving task or as a math test. In a third (teaching-intervention) condition, the test was also described as a math test, but participants were additionally informed that stereotype threat could interfere with womens math performance. Results showed that women performed worse than men when the problems were described as a math test (and stereotype threat was not discussed), but did not differ from men in the problem-solving condition or in the condition in which they learned about stereotype threat. For women, attributing anxiety to gender stereotypes was associated with lower performance in the math-test condition but improved performance in the teaching-intervention condition. The results suggest that teaching about stereotype threat might offer a practical means of reducing its detrimental effects.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2008

Stereotype Threat and Executive Resource Depletion: Examining the Influence of Emotion Regulation.

Michael Johns; Michael Inzlicht; Toni Schmader

Research shows that stereotype threat reduces performance by diminishing executive resources, but less is known about the psychological processes responsible for these impairments. The authors tested the idea that targets of stereotype threat try to regulate their emotions and that this regulation depletes executive resources, resulting in underperformance. Across 4 experiments, they provide converging evidence that targets of stereotype threat spontaneously attempt to control their expression of anxiety and that such emotion regulation depletes executive resources needed to perform well on tests of cognitive ability. They also demonstrate that providing threatened individuals with a means to effectively cope with negative emotions--by reappraising the situation or the meaning of their anxiety--can restore executive resources and improve test performance. They discuss these results within the framework of an integrated process model of stereotype threat, in which affective and cognitive processes interact to undermine performance.


Self and Identity | 2005

Ashamed to Be an American? The role of Identification in Predicting Vicarious Shame for Anti-Arab Prejudice After 9-11

Michael Johns; Toni Schmader; Brian Lickel

We propose that individuals sometimes feel ashamed for the negative actions of their in-group because these actions constitute a threat to their identity. The present study examined factors that evoke shame when individuals recall instances of negative behavior committed by another in-group member. American undergraduates recalled instances when other Americans exhibited prejudice toward people of Middle-Eastern descent after September 11th and rated their emotions and motivations following the event. Results indicated that identification with being American predicted more shame and a stronger desire to distance oneself from the group when the event was very negative. Identification predicted less shame and distancing for less negative events. The implications of the results for social emotions, identity management, and the black sheep effect are discussed.


Psychological Science | 2016

Knowing Is Half the Battle

Michael Johns; Toni Schmader; Andy Martens

We tested whether informing women about stereotype threat is a useful intervention to improve their performance in a threatening testing situation. Men and women completed difficult math problems described either as a problem-solving task or as a math test. In a third (teaching-intervention) condition, the test was also described as a math test, but participants were additionally informed that stereotype threat could interfere with womens math performance. Results showed that women performed worse than men when the problems were described as a math test (and stereotype threat was not discussed), but did not differ from men in the problem-solving condition or in the condition in which they learned about stereotype threat. For women, attributing anxiety to gender stereotypes was associated with lower performance in the math-test condition but improved performance in the teaching-intervention condition. The results suggest that teaching about stereotype threat might offer a practical means of reducing its detrimental effects.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2003

Converging evidence that stereotype threat reduces working memory capacity.

Toni Schmader; Michael Johns


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2006

Combating stereotype threat: The effect of self-affirmation on women's intellectual performance

Andy Martens; Michael Johns; Jeff Greenberg; Jeff Schimel


Sex Roles | 2004

The costs of accepting gender differences: The role of stereotype endorsement in women's experience in the math domain

Toni Schmader; Michael Johns; Marchelle Barquissau


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2004

A function of form: Terror management and structuring the social world

Mark J. Landau; Michael Johns; Jeff Greenberg; Tom Pyszczynski; Andy Martens; Jamie L. Goldenberg; Sheldon Solomon


Journal of Research in Personality | 2010

Self-esteem and autonomic physiology: Self-esteem levels predict cardiac vagal tone

Andy Martens; Jeff Greenberg; John J. B. Allen; Joseph Hayes; Jeff Schimel; Michael Johns

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Toni Schmader

University of British Columbia

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Andy Martens

University of Canterbury

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Brian Lickel

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Edith Greene

University of Colorado Colorado Springs

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