Opie Tina R, Phillips Katherine W
Management Division, Babson College, Babson Park MA, USA.
Management Division, Columbia Business School, New York NY, USA.
Front Psychol. 2015 Aug 31;6:1311. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01311. eCollection 2015.
Women are penalized if they do not behave in a stereotype-congruent manner (Heilman, 1983, 2001; Eagly and Carli, 2007). For example, because women are not expected to be agentic they incur an "agency penalty" for expressing anger, dominance or assertiveness (Rudman, 1998; Rudman and Glick, 1999, 2001; Eagly and Karau, 2002; Rudman and Fairchild, 2004; Brescoll and Uhlmann, 2008; Livingston et al., 2012). Yet, all women are not equally penalized (Livingston et al., 2012). We make a novel contribution by examining how both White and Black evaluators respond to displays of Black women's dominance, in this case, whether Black women choose to wear Afrocentric or Eurocentric hairstyles.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: We conducted three experimental studies to examine the influence of target hairstyle and participant race on ratings of the target's professionalism (Studies 1, 2, and 3) and dominance (Study 2). Study 1 was an online experimental study with 200 participants (112 females, 87 males, 1 missing gender; 160 Whites, 19 Blacks, 11 Latinos, 7 Asian Americans and 3 who identify as "other"; M age = 35.5, SD = 11.4). Study 2 was an online experimental study with 510 participants (276 women, 234 males; 256 Blacks, 254 Whites; M age = 41.25 years, SD = 12.21). Study 3 was an online experimental study with 291 participants (141 Blacks, 150 Whites, M age = 47.5 years, SD = 11.66).
Black, as compared to White, evaluators gave higher agency penalties to Black employment candidates when they donned Afrocentric versus Eurocentric hair, rating them as more dominant and less professional.
The present research illustrates the significance of considering both target and evaluator race when examining the influence of agency, and specifically dominance, on ratings of professionalism.
如果女性的行为不符合刻板印象,她们会受到惩罚(海尔曼,1983年、2001年;伊格利和卡利,2007年)。例如,由于人们认为女性不应具有能动性,她们因表达愤怒、支配欲或自信而受到“能动性惩罚”(鲁德曼,1998年;鲁德曼和格利克,1999年、2001年;伊格利和卡劳,2002年;鲁德曼和费尔柴尔德,2004年;布雷斯科尔和乌尔曼,2008年;利文斯顿等人,2012年)。然而,并非所有女性都受到同等程度的惩罚(利文斯顿等人,2012年)。我们通过研究白人评估者和黑人评估者如何回应黑人女性的支配表现(在本研究中,即黑人女性选择留非洲中心主义发型还是欧洲中心主义发型),做出了新的贡献。
设计/方法/途径:我们进行了三项实验研究,以考察目标发型和参与者种族对目标专业性评分(研究1、2和3)以及支配性评分(研究2)的影响。研究1是一项在线实验研究,有200名参与者(112名女性,87名男性,1名未表明性别;160名白人,19名黑人,11名拉丁裔,7名亚裔美国人,3名属于“其他”类别;平均年龄 = 35.5岁,标准差 = 11.4)。研究2是一项在线实验研究,有510名参与者(276名女性,234名男性;256名黑人,254名白人;平均年龄 = 41.25岁,标准差 = 12.21)。研究3是一项在线实验研究,有291名参与者(141名黑人,150名白人,平均年龄 = 47.5岁,标准差 = 11.66)。
与白人评估者相比,黑人评估者对留非洲中心主义发型而非欧洲中心主义发型的黑人求职者给予更高的能动性惩罚,将他们评为更具支配性且专业性更低。
本研究表明,在考察能动性(尤其是支配性)对专业性评分的影响时,考虑目标和评估者双方的种族具有重要意义。