Banaji M R, Greenwald A G
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8205.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 1995 Feb;68(2):181-98. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.68.2.181.
Implicit (unconscious) gender stereotyping in fame judgments was tested with an adaptation of a procedure developed by L. L. Jacoby, C. M. Kelley, J. Brown, and J. Jasechko (1989). In Experiments 1-4, participants pronounced 72 names of famous and nonfamous men and women, and 24 or 48 hr later made fame judgments in response to the 72 familiar and 72 unfamiliar famous and nonfamous names. These first experiments, in which signal detection analysis was used to assess implicit stereotypes, demonstrate that the gender bias (greater assignment of fame to male than female names) was located in the use of a lower criterion (beta) for judging fame of familiar male than female names. Experiments 3 and 4 also showed that explicit expressions of sexism or stereotypes were uncorrelated with the observed implicit gender bias in fame judgments.
通过改编L. L. 雅可比、C. M. 凯利、J. 布朗和J. 亚塞奇科(1989年)开发的程序,对名人判断中隐性(无意识)的性别刻板印象进行了测试。在实验1至4中,参与者朗读了72个著名和非著名男性与女性的名字,在24或48小时后,对72个熟悉和72个不熟悉的著名和非著名名字做出名人判断。在这些首次实验中,信号检测分析被用于评估隐性刻板印象,结果表明性别偏见(将名人身份更多地赋予男性名字而非女性名字)在于对熟悉的男性名字与女性名字进行名人判断时采用了更低的标准(β)。实验3和4还表明,性别歧视或刻板印象的明确表达与名人判断中观察到的隐性性别偏见无关。