Women exaggerate, men downplay: Gendered endorsement of emotional dramatization stereotypes contributes to gender bias in pain expectations

被引:12
|
作者
Paganini, Gina A. [1 ]
Summers, Kevin M. [1 ]
ten Brinke, Leanne [2 ]
Lloyd, Paige [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Denver, Dept Psychol, 2155 S Race St, Denver, CO 80208 USA
[2] Univ British Columbia Okanagan, Dept Psychol, 3187 Univ Way,ASC 413, Kelowna, BC, Canada
关键词
Person perception; Impression formation; Gender; Pain; Emotion; HEALTH-CARE PROVIDERS; RACIAL BIAS; RACE; DISPARITIES; SEX; MANAGEMENT; SELF; RECOMMENDATIONS; METAANALYSIS; JUDGMENTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104520
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The current work tested whether perceivers believe that women, relative to men, are likely to exaggerate versus downplay pain, an effect we refer to as the gender-pain exaggeration bias. The gender-pain exaggeration bias was operationalized as the extent to which perceivers believe women, relative to men, claim more pain than they feel. Across four experiments, we found that women were expected to exaggerate pain more than men and men were expected to downplay pain more than women (Studies 1-4). Further, judgments that women were more emotionally dramatizing than men contributed to this gender-pain exaggeration bias (Studies 2 and 4). We also assessed whether perceiver-level differences in endorsement of gendered emotional dramatization stereotypes (Studies 3-4) moderated this gender-pain exaggeration bias and found that endorsement of gendered emotional dramatization stereotypes moderated this bias. In sum, we document a relative gender-pain exaggeration bias wherein perceivers believe women, relative to men, to be emotionally dramatizing and therefore more likely to exaggerate versus downplay their pain. This bias may lead perceivers to interpret women's, relative to men's, pain reports as overstatements, inauthentic, or dramatized. Thus, the current work may have implications for well-documented biases in perceptions of (i.e., underestimating) and responses to (i.e., undertreating) women's pain.
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页数:14
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