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On the bounded rationality of gender stereotyping in fame judgments

Identifieur interne : 001495 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 001494; suivant : 001496

On the bounded rationality of gender stereotyping in fame judgments

Auteurs : Melanie C. Steffens ; Silvia Mecklenbr Uker ; Axel Buchner ; Bettina Mehl

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:02E9D683FAD99B7D6FD74046E577C968A9552288

Abstract

The false‐fame effect is the phenomenon that familiar names are falsely judged famous more often than unfamiliar names. M.R. Banaji and A.G. Greenwald (1995) demonstrated a gender bias in the false‐fame effect: In line with existing gender stereotypes, the false‐fame effect was larger for male than for female names. A more general explanation for gender biasing in fame judgments is based on cognitive availability. Name gender could be used as an ecologically valid cue when making fame judgments. If the relevant universe of famous names contained more male than female names, a gender bias in fame judgments should be observed, if it contained more female names, the gender bias should be reversed. Indeed, this pattern could be demonstrated experimentally, and we argue that it is not compatible with an account that draws on gender stereotyping but with one based on cognitive availability. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Url:
DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.204

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:02E9D683FAD99B7D6FD74046E577C968A9552288

Le document en format XML

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