Erdwins C J, Tyer Z E, Mellinger J C
Int J Aging Hum Dev. 1983;17(2):141-52. doi: 10.2190/6YQQ-EDQ3-KFAR-03Q3.
Self-descriptions on sex role characteristics and related personality traits including achievement and affiliation were compared in four age groups of women: eighteen to twenty-two, twenty-nine to thirty-nine, forty to fifty-five, and sixty to seventy-five year-olds. In general, the two younger groups emerged as least like the traditional feminine sex role stereotype. In comparison to the older women, they were more willing to ascribe masculine sex role characteristics to themselves and rated themselves as less responsible, self-controlled, and affiliative. Conversely, the women over sixty and homemakers in their forties and fifties adhered most strongly to the conventional feminine traits. These differences are explained in terms of the recent changes in societal attitudes toward sex roles. There is also some evidence that significant life roles are related to self-descriptions on these personality dimensions.
对四个年龄段的女性(18至22岁、29至39岁、40至55岁以及60至75岁)关于性别角色特征以及包括成就和归属感在内的相关人格特质的自我描述进行了比较。总体而言,两个较年轻的群体表现出最不像传统女性性别角色刻板印象。与年长女性相比,她们更愿意将男性性别角色特征归于自己,并且给自己的评价是责任感、自我控制能力和归属感较低。相反,60岁以上的女性以及四五十岁的家庭主妇最强烈地坚持传统女性特质。这些差异可以从社会对性别角色态度的近期变化方面来解释。也有一些证据表明,重要的生活角色与这些人格维度上的自我描述有关。