Gender stereotypes and motor performance: How explicit and implicit stereotypes influence girls standing long jump and anxiety

被引:9
|
作者
Saemi, Esmaeel [1 ]
Moteshareie, Ebrahim [2 ]
Jalilinasab, Sara [1 ]
Afrash, Sana [1 ]
Deshayes, Maxime [3 ]
机构
[1] Shahid Chamran Univ Ahvaz, Fac Sport Sci, Dept Motor Behav & Sport Psychol, Ahvaz, Iran
[2] Shahid Beheshti Univ, Fac Sport Sci & Hlth, Dept Cognit & Behav Sci & Technol Sport, Tehran, Iran
[3] UNIV, NIMES, APSY V, F-30021, F-1 Nimes 1, France
关键词
Explicit stereotype; Implicit stereotype; Motor performance; State anxiety; Children; THREAT; MATH; SPORT; TASK; METAANALYSIS; IDENTITY; FEMALES; IMPACT; PLAY; ACTIVATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.psychsport.2022.102334
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Objectives: Inducing a negative stereotype toward women usually leads to a decrease in women's motor per-formance. Given that most studies have focused on explicit stereotype induction among adults, the main aim of this study was to investigate the effects of explicit and implicit gender stereotypes on standing long jump per-formance in children. The second aim was to investigate the effects of these same manipulations on children's state anxiety.Design: A mixed model design with within-between-subject was used with standing long jump performance and state anxiety as dependent variables.Method: Two hundred and four children (Mage = 10.95 years, SDage = 0.85) participated in this study and were randomly assigned, after baseline measurement, into four different groups (i.e., explicit/implicit vs. explicit vs. implicit vs. control). Specifically, participants performed 8 trials of standing long jump (4 trials during the baseline phase and 4 trials during the experimental phase). Children also completed the competitive state Anxiety Inventory at baseline as well as immediately after the trials.Results: For motor performance, children in the explicit/implicit group and in the implicit group were negatively affected by the stereotype manipulation during all trials whereas participants in the explicit group were only negatively impacted during the last two trials. However, regarding state anxiety, children were negatively affected after both explicit only and implicit only manipulations and more significantly after explicit/implicit manipulation.Conclusions: The present research showed that the explicit and implicit manipulations influenced motor per-formance differently, but that these two manipulations increased state anxiety in the same way. Moreover, the combination of the explicit and implicit inductions leads to a greater significant negative influence on state anxiety but not motor performance.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effects of Long-Term Exposure to News Stereotypes on Implicit and Explicit Attitudes
    Arendt, Florian
    Northup, Temple
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2015, 9 : 2370 - 2390
  • [22] Children's Implicit and Explicit Stereotypes on the Gender, Social Skills, and Interests of a Computer Scientist
    de Wit, Shirley
    Hermans, Felienne
    Aivaloglou, Efthimia
    ICER 2021: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 17TH ACM CONFERENCE ON INTERNATIONAL COMPUTING EDUCATION RESEARCH, 2021, : 239 - 251
  • [23] Women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM): An Investigation of Their Implicit Gender Stereotypes and Stereotypes’ Connectedness to Math Performance
    Annique Smeding
    Sex Roles, 2012, 67 : 617 - 629
  • [24] Women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM): An Investigation of Their Implicit Gender Stereotypes and Stereotypes' Connectedness to Math Performance
    Smeding, Annique
    SEX ROLES, 2012, 67 (11-12) : 617 - 629
  • [25] Gender Stereotypes Influence How People Explain Gender Disparities in the Workplace
    Jessica L. Cundiff
    Theresa K. Vescio
    Sex Roles, 2016, 75 : 126 - 138
  • [26] Gender Stereotypes Influence How People Explain Gender Disparities in the Workplace
    Cundiff, Jessica L.
    Vescio, Theresa K.
    SEX ROLES, 2016, 75 (3-4) : 126 - 138
  • [27] Male = Science, Female = Humanities: Both Implicit and Explicit Gender-Science Stereotypes Are Heritable
    Cai, Huajian
    Luo, Yu L. L.
    Shi, Yuanyuan
    Liu, Yunzhi
    Yang, Ziyan
    SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE, 2016, 7 (05) : 412 - 419
  • [28] Sport = MaleaEuro¦ But Not All Sports: Investigating the Gender Stereotypes of Sport Activities at the Explicit and Implicit Levels
    Plaza, Melissa
    Boiche, Julie
    Brunel, Lionel
    Ruchaud, Francois
    SEX ROLES, 2017, 76 (3-4) : 202 - 217
  • [29] Sport = Male… But Not All Sports: Investigating the Gender Stereotypes of Sport Activities at the Explicit and Implicit Levels
    Mélissa Plaza
    Julie Boiché
    Lionel Brunel
    François Ruchaud
    Sex Roles, 2017, 76 : 202 - 217
  • [30] Children's implicit and explicit attitudes and stereotypes about same-gender parent families
    Farr, Rachel H.
    Salomon, Ilyssa P.
    Brown-Iannuzzi, Jazmin L.
    Brown, Christia Spears
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 95