Abstract:
Two experiments tested a form of automatic stereotyping. Subjects saw
primes related to gender (e.g., mother, father, nurse, doctor) or neutral
with respect to gender (e.g., parent, student, person) followed by target
pronouns (stimulus onset asynchrony = 300 ms) that were gender related
(e.g., she, he) or neutral (it, me) or followed by nonpronouns (do, all,
Experiment 2 only). In Experiment 1, subjects judged whether each
pronoun was male or female. Automatic gender beliefs (stereotypes) were
observed in faster responses to pronouns consistent than inconsistent
with the gender component of the prime regardless of subjects' awareness
of the prime-target relations, and independently of subjects' explicit
beliefs about gender stereotypes and language reform. In Experiment 2,
automatic stereotyping was obtained even though a gender irrelevant
judgment task (pronoun/not pronoun) was used. Together, these
experiments demonstrate that gender information imparted by words can
automatically influence judgments, although the strength of such effects
may be moderated by judgment task and prime type.