Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading

The present eye-tracking study investigates the effect of gender typicality on the resolution of anaphoric personal pronouns in English. Participants read descriptions of a person performing a typically male, typically female or gender-neutral occupational activity. The description was followed by a...

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Main Authors: Chiara eReali, Yulia eEsaulova, Anton eÖttl, Lisa eVon Stockhausen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01607/full
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spelling doaj-798a5f189cd04f26a27b50edfa13c3892020-11-24T22:54:12ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782015-11-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.01607154406Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during readingChiara eReali0Yulia eEsaulova1Anton eÖttl2Lisa eVon Stockhausen3University of Duisburg-EssenUniversity of Duisburg-EssenNorwegian University of Science and TechnologyUniversity of Duisburg-EssenThe present eye-tracking study investigates the effect of gender typicality on the resolution of anaphoric personal pronouns in English. Participants read descriptions of a person performing a typically male, typically female or gender-neutral occupational activity. The description was followed by an anaphoric reference (he or she) which revealed the referent's gender. The first experiment presented roles which were highly typical for men (e.g., blacksmith) or for women (e.g., beautician), the second experiment presented role descriptions with a moderate degree of gender typicality (e.g., psychologist, lawyer). Results revealed a gender mismatch effect in early and late measures in the first experiment and in an early measure in the second experiment. Moreover, eye-movement data for highly typical roles correlated with explicit typicality ratings. The results are discussed from a cross-linguistic perspective, comparing natural gender languages and grammatical gender languages. An interpretation of the cognitive representation of typicality beliefs is proposed.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01607/fullEye-trackingGender stereotypessentence readingGender typicalityanaphor resolution.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chiara eReali
Yulia eEsaulova
Anton eÖttl
Lisa eVon Stockhausen
spellingShingle Chiara eReali
Yulia eEsaulova
Anton eÖttl
Lisa eVon Stockhausen
Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
Frontiers in Psychology
Eye-tracking
Gender stereotypes
sentence reading
Gender typicality
anaphor resolution.
author_facet Chiara eReali
Yulia eEsaulova
Anton eÖttl
Lisa eVon Stockhausen
author_sort Chiara eReali
title Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
title_short Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
title_full Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
title_fullStr Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
title_full_unstemmed Role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
title_sort role descriptions induce gender mismatch effects in eye movements during reading
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2015-11-01
description The present eye-tracking study investigates the effect of gender typicality on the resolution of anaphoric personal pronouns in English. Participants read descriptions of a person performing a typically male, typically female or gender-neutral occupational activity. The description was followed by an anaphoric reference (he or she) which revealed the referent's gender. The first experiment presented roles which were highly typical for men (e.g., blacksmith) or for women (e.g., beautician), the second experiment presented role descriptions with a moderate degree of gender typicality (e.g., psychologist, lawyer). Results revealed a gender mismatch effect in early and late measures in the first experiment and in an early measure in the second experiment. Moreover, eye-movement data for highly typical roles correlated with explicit typicality ratings. The results are discussed from a cross-linguistic perspective, comparing natural gender languages and grammatical gender languages. An interpretation of the cognitive representation of typicality beliefs is proposed.
topic Eye-tracking
Gender stereotypes
sentence reading
Gender typicality
anaphor resolution.
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01607/full
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AT yuliaeesaulova roledescriptionsinducegendermismatcheffectsineyemovementsduringreading
AT antoneottl roledescriptionsinducegendermismatcheffectsineyemovementsduringreading
AT lisaevonstockhausen roledescriptionsinducegendermismatcheffectsineyemovementsduringreading
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