Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Downing Place, Cambridge CB2 3EB, UK.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Program, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT 05753, USA.
Horm Behav. 2023 Mar;149:105310. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105310. Epub 2023 Feb 2.
Human males and females show average gender/sex differences for certain psychological phenomena. Multiple factors may contribute to these differences, including sex chromosomes, exposure to gonadal hormones, and socialization or learning. This study investigated potential hormonal and socialization/learning influences on gender/sex differences in childhood preferences for color, specifically pink and red vs. blues, and for toys. Children (aged 4 to 11 years) with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH, n = 43 girls and 37 boys), marked by elevated prenatal adrenal androgen exposure, and without CAH (n = 41 girls and 31 boys) were studied. Prior research indicates girls with CAH are masculinized for certain behaviors, such as toy choices, while boys with CAH generally do not differ from boys without CAH. In the current study, children indicated preferences for stereotyped hues of pink vs. blue as well as two control color pairs. They also indicated their preference between gender/sex-typed toys (doll vs. car) presented in black and white, in gender/sex-congruent colors (pink doll vs. blue car) and in gender/sex-incongruent colors (pink car vs. blue doll). Color findings: Control girls preferred stereotyped pink over blue more than boys or girls with CAH did; the latter two groups did not differ in their color preferences. No preference differences occurred for other color pairs. Toy findings: In black/white or gender/sex-congruent colors, boys preferred the car more than control girls or girls with CAH did, while girls with CAH preferred the car more than control girls did. In gender/sex-incongruent colors (pink car vs. blue doll), boys still preferred the car, while girls with CAH showed reduced and control girls showed increased preferences for the pink car compared to the car preferences in black/white. Results support learning theories of color preferences, perhaps also influenced by pre-existing toy preferences which may occur for other reasons, including early androgen exposure. Specifically, girls with CAH may have learned they do not enjoy stereotypical toys for girls, often colored pink, and pink coloring may subsequently diminish their preference for a car. Our results highlight the importance of gonadal hormones and learning in the development of childhood toy and color preferences.
男性和女性在某些心理现象上表现出平均的性别差异。多种因素可能导致这些差异,包括性染色体、性腺激素暴露以及社会化或学习。本研究调查了潜在的激素和社会化/学习因素对儿童对颜色(特别是粉色和红色与蓝色)以及玩具的性别差异的影响。研究对象为患有先天性肾上腺增生症(CAH)的儿童(n=43 名女孩和 37 名男孩)和无 CAH 的儿童(n=41 名女孩和 31 名男孩)。先前的研究表明,患有 CAH 的女孩在某些行为上会表现出男性化,例如玩具选择,而患有 CAH 的男孩通常与没有 CAH 的男孩没有区别。在本研究中,孩子们表示了对粉色与蓝色等刻板色调的偏好,以及两种对照颜色对。他们还表示了对以黑白形式呈现的性别典型玩具(娃娃与汽车)、以性别一致的颜色(粉色娃娃与蓝色汽车)和以性别不一致的颜色(粉色汽车与蓝色娃娃)的偏好。颜色发现:对照女孩比男孩或患有 CAH 的女孩更喜欢刻板的粉色;后两组在颜色偏好上没有差异。其他颜色对没有偏好差异。玩具发现:在黑白或性别一致的颜色中,男孩比对照女孩或患有 CAH 的女孩更喜欢汽车,而患有 CAH 的女孩比对照女孩更喜欢汽车。在性别不一致的颜色(粉色汽车与蓝色娃娃)中,男孩仍然更喜欢汽车,而患有 CAH 的女孩与黑白颜色相比,对粉色汽车的偏好减少,对照女孩的偏好增加。结果支持颜色偏好的学习理论,可能也受到其他原因(包括早期雄激素暴露)导致的现有玩具偏好的影响。具体来说,患有 CAH 的女孩可能已经了解到她们不喜欢典型的女孩玩具,通常是粉色的,而粉色的颜色随后可能会降低她们对汽车的偏好。我们的研究结果强调了性腺激素和学习在儿童玩具和颜色偏好发展中的重要性。