HIGHLIGHTS
- who: J. Adam Carter from the when individuals who belong to negatively stereotyped groups regard themselves as likely to perform in accordance with the negative stereotype, and this tendency increases when one reflects on one's membership in a stigmatised group [see, for example, Alfano (2014)]In extreme cases of stereotype threat, an individual from a group stereotyped as lacking in intelligence might, upon reflecting on her group membership, positively believe that she is cognitively unreliable at whatever task she is pursuing. If such an individual affirms nonetheless, her attempt at truth incurs a defeater and so . . .

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