Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada;
Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Oct 5;118(40). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2026308118.
Why are women socially excluded in fields dominated by men? Beyond the barriers associated with any minority group's mere numerical underrepresentation, we theorized that gender stereotypes exacerbate the social exclusion of women in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) workplaces, with career consequences. Although widely discussed, clear evidence of these relationships remains elusive. In a sample of 1,247 STEM professionals who work in teams, we tested preregistered hypotheses that acts of gendered social exclusion are systematically associated with both men's gender stereotypes (Part 1) and negative workplace outcomes for women (Part 2). Combining social network metrics of inclusion and reaction time measures of implicit stereotypes (the tendency to "think STEM, think men"), this study provides unique empirical evidence of the chilly climate women often report experiencing in STEM. Men with stronger implicit gender stereotypes had fewer social ties to female teammates. In turn, women (but not men) with fewer incoming cross-gender social ties reported worse career fit and engagement. Moderated mediation revealed that for women (but not men), cross-gender social exclusion was linked to more negative workplace outcomes via lower social fit. Effects of social exclusion were distinct from respect. We discuss the possible benefits of fostering positive cross-gender social relationships to promote women's professional success in STEM.
为什么女性在男性主导的领域中会被社会排斥?除了与任何少数群体的人数代表性不足相关的障碍之外,我们还从理论上假设,性别刻板印象会加剧女性在科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)工作场所中的社会排斥,从而对职业产生影响。尽管这些关系被广泛讨论,但仍缺乏明确的证据。在一项针对 1247 名在团队中工作的 STEM 专业人士的样本中,我们检验了预先注册的假设,即性别歧视的社会排斥行为与男性的性别刻板印象(第 1 部分)以及女性在工作场所的负面结果(第 2 部分)是系统相关的。本研究结合了包容性的社会网络指标和内隐刻板印象的反应时间测量(即“想到 STEM,想到男性”的倾向),为女性在 STEM 中经常报告的寒冷氛围提供了独特的实证证据。具有更强内隐性别刻板印象的男性与女性队友的社交联系较少。反过来,与男性相比,女性(而非男性)获得的跨性别社交联系较少,她们的职业适应性和投入度较差。中介调节分析显示,对于女性(而非男性)来说,跨性别社会排斥通过较低的社交适应性与更负面的工作场所结果相关。社会排斥的影响与尊重不同。我们讨论了培养积极的跨性别社交关系以促进女性在 STEM 中的职业成功的可能好处。