Facial dominance overrides gender in children's stereotypes about intelligence

被引:0
|
作者
Kruger, Ryno [1 ]
Lourenco, Stella F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Emory Univ, Dept Psychol, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
来源
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS | 2025年 / 15卷 / 01期
关键词
Dominance; Intelligence; Faces; Gender; Stereotypes; UNIVERSAL DIMENSIONS; SOCIAL HIERARCHIES; PERSON PERCEPTION; 1ST IMPRESSIONS; COMPETENCE; WOMEN; GIRLS; FACES; BIAS; ATTRIBUTIONS;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-025-86626-3
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Stereotypes are not only pervasive, they can also lead to discrimination against negatively-stereotyped groups. A gender-intelligence stereotype holds that men and boys are smarter than women and girls, despite no such evidence. Developmental research suggests that even children endorse this stereotype, and negative perceptions about self-worth in girls may be a consequence. Here we tested whether the stereotype about intelligence may, instead, be rooted in facial dominance, such that faces higher in dominance are considered smarter than faces lower in dominance. Across two studies, we found that 6- to 10-year-olds used facial dominance to make intelligence judgments (Experiment 1), even under divided attention (Experiment 2). Children judged more dominant faces as smarter than less dominant faces, whether the two faces were male or female. They did not, however, judge men as smarter than women when selecting between male and female faces that were matched in dominance. What is more, there was some evidence that children considered dominant female faces to be smarter than less dominant male faces, suggesting that dominance in faces may be prioritized over face gender when intuiting intelligence. These findings contrasted with children's judgments of niceness where both dominance, and a gender stereotype, were used to infer prosociality. Altogether, our findings provide novel evidence for an association between dominance and intelligence, which appears to predate a gender-intelligence stereotype.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] French Children’s Awareness of Gender Stereotypes About Mathematics and Reading: When Girls Improve Their Reputation in Math
    Delphine Martinot
    Céline Bagès
    Michel Désert
    Sex Roles, 2012, 66 : 210 - 219
  • [42] Come and listen to a story about a girl named Rex - Using children's literature to debunk gender stereotypes
    Roberts, LC
    Hill, HT
    YOUNG CHILDREN, 2003, 58 (02): : 39 - 42
  • [43] French Children's Awareness of Gender Stereotypes About Mathematics and Reading: When Girls Improve Their Reputation in Math
    Martinot, Delphine
    Bages, Celine
    Desert, Michel
    SEX ROLES, 2012, 66 (3-4) : 210 - 219
  • [44] The influence of gender stereotypes on the decoding of emotional facial expressions
    Senecal, S
    Hess, U
    Kleck, RE
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 31 (3-4) : 45439 - 45439
  • [45] Facial expressions can inhibit the activation of gender stereotypes
    Zhang, Xiaobin
    Li, Qiong
    Sun, Shan
    Zuo, Bin
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2019, 33 (07) : 1424 - 1435
  • [46] FORMING IMPRESSIONS: EFFECTS OF FACIAL EXPRESSION AND GENDER STEREOTYPES
    Hack, Tay
    PSYCHOLOGICAL REPORTS, 2014, 114 (02) : 557 - 571
  • [47] At their children's expense: How parent's gender stereotypes affect their children's reading outcomes
    Muntoni, Francesca
    Retelsdorf, Jan
    LEARNING AND INSTRUCTION, 2019, 60 : 95 - 103
  • [48] Gender Stereotypes Are Racialized: A Cross-Cultural Investigation of Gender Stereotypes About Intellectual Talents
    Shu, Yuhang
    Hu, Qingfen
    Xu, Fei
    Bian, Lin
    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 58 (07) : 1345 - 1359
  • [49] Students' Gender Stereotypes about Running in Schools
    Xiang, Ping
    McBride, Ron E.
    Lin, Shuqiong
    Gao, Zan
    Francis, Xueying
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL EDUCATION, 2018, 86 (02): : 233 - 246
  • [50] Stereotypes About Gender and Science: Women ≠ Scientists
    Carli, Linda L.
    Alawa, Laila
    Lee, YoonAh
    Zhao, Bei
    Kim, Elaine
    PSYCHOLOGY OF WOMEN QUARTERLY, 2016, 40 (02) : 244 - 260