Mastodon

unconscious bias brain

There have been many studies on gender biases, and I have followed, written, and spoken about many of these biases over the years (over a decade actually) but two studies have just come out that caught my eye.

One out of New York University focused on gender natural words and found that they are not gender neutral! Specifically, the two most neutral or inclusive words, presupposedly, “person” and “people”.

By analysing language and how similar words are used together (much like words tea and pot may collocate and be related). They found that there is a bias to relate the word person and people more to men than women. This is important because these are precisely the words used in public policy.

In another unrelated and contrasting study another form of bias was uncovered and this was in faces and voices of men and women on neutral characters. What the researchers at the University of Essex found is that faces, and voices were more likely to be judged as male if they were angry and female if they were happy.

Is this good for men or women? I don’t know but shows how there are natural inbuilt biases in us in many ways! Many of which we are probably completely oblivious to.

 

References:

April H. Bailey, Adina Williams, Andrei Cimpian. 
Based on billions of words on the internet, people = men
Science Advances, 2022; 8 (13)
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm2463

Sebastian Korb, Nace Mikus, Claudia Massaccesi, Jack Grey, Suvarnalata Xanthate Duggirala, Sonja A. Kotz, Marc Mehu. 
EmoSex: Emotion prevails over sex in implicit judgments of faces and voices.
Emotion, 2022
DOI: 10.1037/emo0001089

More Quick Hits

Vaccination to Keep Your Memory?

Vaccination to Keep Your Memory?

Quick HitsDaily brief research updates from the cognitive sciences   ho wouldn’t want to keep their memory when aging?! Well, researchers have just announced some promising results in mice enabling them to keep their memories and avoid some of...

Reversing aging – with poo!

Reversing aging – with poo!

Quick HitsDaily brief research updates from the cognitive sciences   ho wouldn't want to age better - well the results of an unsual study are in and the results are promising and may make many of you who are aging prick up your ears. The...

Brisk walking slows biological aging

Brisk walking slows biological aging

Quick HitsDaily brief research updates from the cognitive sciences   f you want to age better, then walk quicker, or those who walk quicker, age slower. That is the result of a recent study of 400,000 UK adults mapped to genetic markers of age...

Learning at double-speed?

Learning at double-speed?

Quick HitsDaily brief research updates from the cognitive sciences   ouldn’t it be great if we could learn things double speed? Well, maybe we can. At least according to a study out of the University of California. During the pandemic many...