Department of Psychology, New York University Abu Dhabi.
Department of Psychology, New York University.
Psychol Sci. 2022 Apr;33(4):595-612. doi: 10.1177/09567976211044133. Epub 2022 Mar 23.
Women are underrepresented in fields in which success is believed to require brilliance, but the reasons for this pattern are poorly understood. We investigated perceptions of a "masculinity-contest culture," an organizational environment of ruthless competition, as a key mechanism whereby a perceived emphasis on brilliance discourages female participation. Across three preregistered correlational and experimental studies involving adult lay participants online ( = 870) and academics from more than 30 disciplines ( = 1,347), we found a positive association between the perception that a field or an organization values brilliance and the perception that this field or organization is characterized by a masculinity-contest culture. This association was particularly strong among women. In turn, perceiving a masculinity-contest culture predicted lower interest and sense of belonging as well as stronger impostor feelings. Experimentally reducing the perception of a masculinity-contest culture eliminated gender gaps in interest and belonging in a brilliance-oriented organization, suggesting possible avenues for intervention.
女性在被认为需要才华才能成功的领域中代表性不足,但造成这种模式的原因还不太清楚。我们研究了对“男性竞争文化”的看法,即一种残酷竞争的组织环境,作为一种关键机制,即人们认为过分强调才华会阻碍女性的参与。在三项预先注册的涉及在线成年普通参与者(= 870)和来自 30 多个学科的学者(= 1,347)的相关和实验研究中,我们发现,人们对某个领域或组织重视才华的看法与认为该领域或组织具有男性竞争文化的看法之间存在正相关关系。这种关联在女性中尤为强烈。反过来,感知到男性竞争文化会预测较低的兴趣和归属感,以及更强的冒名顶替感。通过实验减少对男性竞争文化的感知,可以消除以才华为导向的组织中对兴趣和归属感的性别差距,这表明可能存在干预的途径。