Siegling A B, Eskritt Michelle, Delaney Mary E
Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, WC1H 0AP London, UK.
Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Canada.
Curr Psychol. 2014;33(4):479-500. doi: 10.1007/s12144-014-9224-7.
We investigated the role that linguistic abstraction may play in people's perceptions of gender in spoken language. In the first experiment, participants told stories about their best friend and romantic partner. Variations in linguistic abstraction and gender-linked adjectives for describing their close others were examined. Participants used significantly more abstract language to describe men compared to women, possibly reflecting a gender stereotype associated with the dispositionality factor of linguistic abstraction. In a second experiment, a new group of participants judged the gender of the protagonists from the stories generated in Experiment 1, after the explicit linguistic gender cues were removed. Consistent with the dispositionality factor, linguistic abstraction moderated the effects of the gender stereotypicality of the context (masculine, feminine, or neutral) on participants' gender judgments. Discussion focuses on the implications of the results for the communication of gender stereotypes and the effects of linguistic abstraction in more naturalistic language.
我们研究了语言抽象在人们对口语中性别认知方面可能发挥的作用。在第一个实验中,参与者讲述了关于他们最好的朋友和浪漫伴侣的故事。研究人员考察了描述他们亲密他人时语言抽象程度和与性别相关形容词的变化。与描述女性相比,参与者在描述男性时使用了明显更多的抽象语言,这可能反映了与语言抽象的特质因素相关的性别刻板印象。在第二个实验中,一组新的参与者在去除明确的语言性别线索后,对实验1中生成的故事主角的性别进行判断。与特质因素一致,语言抽象调节了语境(男性化、女性化或中性)的性别刻板印象对参与者性别判断的影响。讨论聚焦于研究结果对性别刻板印象传播的影响以及语言抽象在更自然语言中的作用。