A new study published in The Journal of Social Psychology has found that White Americans tend to perform worse on tasks requiring rhythmic ability when reminded of the stereotype that they “have no rhythm.” The research suggests that when this stereotype is made mentally prominent, White participants scored lower on a rhythm-based video game and reported lower enjoyment of dancing compared to peers not exposed to the stereotype. The findings indicate that stereotype threat can influence behavior even in domains often treated as humorous or lighthearted, such as dancing.
The stereotype that White Americans lack rhythm is a recurring theme in popular culture, comedy, and media. Although often portrayed as harmless humor, the persistence of this stereotype raises questions about its psychological impact.
While many studies have explored how negative stereotypes affect the performance of marginalized groups, such as the stereotype that women struggle with math or that Black students underperform academically, less research has looked at how stereotypes affect individuals who are not typically seen as disadvantaged. The new study aimed to explore whether White individuals could experience stereotype threat in a context where they are negatively stereotyped, in this case, rhythmic ability.
The research team sought to answer two main questions. First, does making the stereotype about White people’s lack of rhythm salient actually impair their rhythmic performance? Second, does it lead them to disengage from activities related to rhythm, such as dancing?
The study included 118 non-Hispanic White American college students from a Midwestern university. The participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups. One group was told that the task they would complete—a rhythm-based video game—was designed to measure their rhythmic ability. The other group was told that the game was being used to inform future video game development and was not a test of ability.
The game involved keeping time with a metronome by pressing the spacebar in rhythm. After 10 seconds, the metronome stopped, and participants had to continue the beat on their own. Their timing accuracy was scored, with 1,000 points as the maximum.
Participants also completed several questionnaires. They rated their enjoyment of dancing, their level of anxiety, and their familiarity with stereotypes about different groups, including the one suggesting that White people cannot dance. Additional questions assessed their prior musical experience and video game habits, allowing the researchers to control for these factors in the analysis.
The results showed that participants who were told the game measured their rhythmic ability—those in the stereotype threat condition—performed worse than those in the control group. On average, they scored about 714 out of 1,000, compared to roughly 760 for those not exposed to stereotype threat. This performance gap suggests that simply drawing attention to the stereotype may be enough to impair rhythmic accuracy.
In addition to performance differences, the researchers found that participants in the stereotype threat condition reported liking dancing less than those in the control group. While both groups still expressed moderate enjoyment of dancing, the threat condition reported significantly lower enthusiasm. This result indicates a tendency toward what psychologists call domain disengagement, where individuals distance themselves from areas in which they feel stereotyped.
One possible explanation for these effects is that stereotype threat causes anxiety, which then interferes with performance. However, this study did not find evidence for that pathway. Participants in both conditions reported similar levels of state anxiety, and statistical tests did not support the idea that anxiety mediated the relationship between stereotype threat and performance. This finding is consistent with mixed results from previous research, which have shown that anxiety sometimes—but not always—acts as a mechanism for stereotype threat.
Although the results are statistically significant, the study does have some limitations. One limitation is the short-term nature of the experiment. It measured immediate effects of stereotype threat, but did not assess how repeated exposure might influence people over time. Prior research suggests that long-term exposure to stereotype threat can lead to domain disidentification, where people stop identifying with an activity or role altogether. Future studies could follow participants over longer periods to explore whether White individuals who frequently experience rhythmic stereotype threat eventually stop dancing or avoid rhythmic activities.
Another limitation is the use of a single survey item to measure participants’ enjoyment of dancing. While single-item measures can be appropriate when questions are straightforward, they do not capture the full complexity of attitudes. Future studies might use more detailed scales to better understand how stereotype threat influences attitudes toward rhythm-related domains.
The rhythm task itself also raises questions about real-world relevance. Pressing a spacebar in time with a beat is simpler and less socially demanding than, for example, performing a dance routine in front of others. Nonetheless, the fact that performance differences appeared even in this relatively simple task suggests that stronger effects could emerge in more realistic or socially charged situations, such as dancing at a party or auditioning for a performance.
The context in which stereotype threat occurs also seems to matter. The researchers note that rhythmic stereotype threat might be especially likely to occur in multicultural settings or when White individuals engage with genres associated with other racial groups, such as hip-hop or afrobeats. In contrast, rhythm-related activities associated more strongly with White identity, like country music line dancing, may not trigger the same effects. Future work could explore these contextual factors more deeply.
The study, “Fighting the beat and winning: stereotype threat and White people’s rhythmic performance,” was authored by Simon Howard and Alex M. Borgella.