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Without social cues it's male: Children perceive amorphous drawing of adults as male, but less so in social contexts

机译:没有社交提示,那就是男性:孩子们认为成年人对男性的无定形绘画是男性,但在社交环境中则更少

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Peoples strong tendency to assign male gender to neutrally described persons has been termed the people = male bias. We aimed to assess whether this effect can be elicited using amorphous visual stimuli instead of verbal descriptions and whether it is already evident in childhood. We presented 53 children (4 to 12 yrs., 27 boys) with black-and-white amorphous drawings of humans and asked them whether the adult depicted was a man or a woman. The option to choose "I dont know" was also provided. In order to assess whether social contexts influenced childrens gender attributions (as has been previously reported for adults) we placed the same amorphous humans in three different contexts: 1) the adult was depicted alone, 2) the adult was passively involved in a social situation with a child and 3) the adult was actively helping a child. Children showed a clear tendency to assign male gender to the amorphous adults across all context variations; this was equally true for boys and for girls. However, when the adult was shown in a social context the proportion of male gender attributions was lower compared to the condition without social context. The older the children were, the more likely they were to attribute female gender to a higher proportion of amorphous figures across all contexts. Median response times were higher for "female" ratings, indicating that this decision was associated with greater cognitive effort. Our results show that a strong bias towards attributing male gender to visually presented amorphous figures is evident already in childhood and that it somewhat decreases with age. For children, just as it has been demonstrated for adults, social contexts lead to a larger proportion of female gender attributions. These results encourage future research to include developmental aspects for explaining the mechanisms underlying gender perception and stereotypes.
机译:人们将男性性别分配给中立描述的人的强烈倾向被称为“人=男性偏见”。我们的目的是评估是否可以使用无定形的视觉刺激而不是口头描述来引起这种效应,以及这种效应是否在儿童时期就已经很明显了。我们为53名儿童(4至12岁,男27名)提供了黑白无定形人物图画,并询问他们描绘的成年人是男人还是女人。还提供了选择“我不知道”的选项。为了评估社会环境是否影响了儿童的性别归属(如先前针对成年人的报道),我们在三个不同的环境中放置了同一无定形的人:1)成人被单独描绘,2)成人被动地参与了社会状况3)成人正在积极帮助儿童。在所有背景变化中,儿童都有明显的倾向将男性性别分配给无定形成年人。对于男孩和女孩来说也是如此。但是,当在社会背景下显示成年人时,与没有社会背景的情况相比,男性性别归因的比例要低。孩子年龄越大,就越有可能将女性归因于在所有情况下较高比例的无定形人物。 “女性”等级的中位反应时间更长,表明该决定与更大的认知努力有关。我们的研究结果表明,在童年时代就已经明显倾向于将男性性别归因于视觉呈现的无定形人物,并且这种偏见随着年龄的增长而有所降低。对于儿童而言,正如成年人所证明的那样,社会背景导致女性性别归因的比例更大。这些结果鼓励未来的研究包括发展方面,以解释性别观念和定型观念的潜在机制。

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