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Gender Stereotyping Enhances Verbal Fluency Performance in Men (and Women)
Ist Teil von
Zeitschrift für Psychologie, 2012, Vol.220 (2), p.70-77
Ort / Verlag
Göttingen: Hogrefe Publishing
Erscheinungsjahr
2012
Quelle
Sociological Abstracts
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Numerous studies have demonstrated that fear of confirming negative stereotypes
(stereotype threat) can hamper women's performance in certain
mathematical and spatial tasks in which men usually excel. By contrast, very
little is known about how men are affected by stereotype threat in tasks in
which women excel. We therefore asked 36 men and 39 women, recruited at the
Ruhr-University of Bochum, Germany, to complete two tests of verbal fluency
(word fluency, four-word sentences). Prior to testing, participants were either
told that gender differences in verbal abilities were going to be investigated
or they received gender-neutral task instructions. We hypothesized that this
would trigger the gender stereotype of women's verbal superiority
and, as a consequence, lead to a stereotype threat effect with decreased verbal
fluency performance in men. However, men's verbal fluency scores were
higher under gender difference instructions than in the control condition. Since
women showed a similar pattern and had generally higher scores, the gender
difference remained stable across conditions. The findings may reflect (a) that
gender stereotyping induced a competitive situation and, as a result, enhanced
performance in all participants or (b) stereotype reactance in men, which would
suggest that men and women react differently to gender stereotype activations in
gender-sensitive cognitive abilities. Either way, the findings imply that
cognitive performance changes significantly if participants are aware that
cognitive gender differences are investigated, which is probably the case in
many studies investigating gender differences.