| Literature DB >> 23226494 |
Anna Siyanova-Chanturia1, Francesca Pesciarelli, Cristina Cacciari.
Abstract
Despite the widely documented influence of gender stereotypes on social behaviour, little is known about the electrophysiological substrates engaged in the processing of such information when conveyed by language. Using event-related brain potentials (ERPs), we examined the brain response to third-person pronouns (lei "she" and lui "he") that were implicitly primed by definitional (passeggera(FEM) "passenger", pensionato(MASC) "pensioner"), or stereotypical antecedents (insegnante "teacher", conducente "driver"). An N400-like effect on the pronoun emerged when it was preceded by a definitionally incongruent prime (passeggera(FEM)--lui; pensionato(MASC)--lei), and a stereotypically incongruent prime for masculine pronouns only (insegnante--lui). In addition, a P300-like effect was found when the pronoun was preceded by definitionally incongruent primes. However, this effect was observed for female, but not male participants. Overall, these results provide further evidence for on-line effects of stereotypical gender in language comprehension. Importantly, our results also suggest a gender stereotype asymmetry in that male and female stereotypes affected the processing of pronouns differently.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23226494 PMCID: PMC3513306 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mean log frequency, length, stereotypicality, and valence for stereotypical and definitional gender stimuli.
| Stereotypical | Definitional | ||||
| feminine | masculine | feminine | masculine | ||
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| 2.8 (0–4.6) | 2.9 (1.1–4.8) | 2.9 (1.5–4.4) | 2.9 (0.8–4.7) |
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| 8.0 (4–10) | 7.8 (5–10) | 8.0 (4–10) | 7.8 (5–10) |
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| 5.3 (4.6–6.5) | 2.4 (1.7–3.1) | 4.0 (3.8–4.2) | 4.0 (3.8–4.2) | |
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| 2.7 (1.5–3.4)* | 2.4 (1.7–3.1)* | 4.0 (3.8–4.2)** | 4.0 (3.8–4.2)** |
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| 4.5 (2.3–6.1) | 4.2 (1.7–5.6) | 4.2 (1.7–6.3) | 4.3 (2.2–5.6) |
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Min and max ratings are indicated in parenthesis. Standard Deviation is indicated in italics below the means. T-tests were performed on the means; no statistically significant differences were found in any of the comparisons, suggesting that the stimuli were closely matched for the above properties.
The final rating assigned to each word was calculated by combining the ratings obtained with both directions of the rating scale (see Method).
Figure 1Mean reaction times to judge whether the target pronoun was feminine or masculine.
Figure 2Mean amplitudes evoked by masculine pronouns (lui – “he”) (A) and feminine pronouns (lei – “she”) (B) after male and female definitional primes (n = 25). Zero point is the onset of the pronoun. Amplitudes are provided for representative electrodes only. Negativity is plotted upwards.
Figure 3Mean amplitudes evoked by masculine pronouns (lui – “he”) (A) and feminine pronouns (lei – “she”) (B) after male and female stereotypical primes (n = 25). Zero point is the onset of the pronoun. Amplitudes are provided for representative electrodes only. Negativity is plotted upwards.
Correlations between mean BSRI and ASI (BS and HS) scores and a gender priming score for the stereotypical condition (correlation coefficients/p values)1.
| BSRI | ASI HS | ASI BS | ||||
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| .15/.46 | −.11/.58 | −.17/.40 | .25/.22 | −.17/.40 | .15/.48 |
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| −.16/.43 | .44/.03 | .17/.41 | .07/.73 | .46/.02 | −.05/.81 |
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| −.30/.14 | .14/.50 | .05/.80 | .30/.15 | .35/.09 | .13/.52 |
Because calculating numerous correlations increases the risk of a Type I error, the level of statistical significance of correlation coefficients was adjusted to p<.01.