| Literature DB >> 31721765 |
Selin Gülgöz1, Madeleine DeMeules1, Susan A Gelman2, Kristina R Olson1.
Abstract
Children, across cultures, show an early-emerging tendency to essentialize gender, viewing gender as inborn and predictive of stereotypical preferences. However, research has been limited to children whose own gender experience is largely consistent with the assumptions of gender essentialism. In contrast, transgender children have gender identities (and related stereotypical preferences) that differ from their sex assigned at birth, which therefore appear to challenge an essentialist view of gender. In the current study, we examined the degree to which transgender children (N = 97, 3-11 years) view a child's sex at birth as predictive of their later gender-typed preferences. Additionally, we recruited two comparison groups: cisgender siblings of transgender participants (N = 59) and cisgender, age- and gender-matched controls (N = 90). In an adapted switched-at-birth paradigm, participants in all groups believed that a child's sex at birth would predict their later gender-typed preferences; participants were especially likely to think so when the target character was reared in a socialization environment that aligned with the target's own gender, rather than one where the socialization environment aligned with a different gender. Whereas cisgender participants showed a decline in essentialism with age, transgender children did not show any age-related changes in their beliefs. The current findings are the first to show that transgender and cisgender children, despite differences in gender experiences, might similarly essentialize gender. However, these findings also raise questions about how different participant groups might interpret measures differently.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31721765 PMCID: PMC6853285 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant demographics.
| Transgender | Cisgender Siblings | Cisgender Controls | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | 97 | 59 | 90 | |
| Age | 7.89 (2.08) years | 7.90 (2.09) years | 7.89 (2.03) years | |
| Gender | 63 girls, 34 boys | 20 girls, 39 boys | 59 girls, 31 boys | |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| White/European | 68% | 73% | 73% | |
| Hispanic/Latino | - | 5% | 1% | |
| Black/African | 1% | - | - | |
| Asian | 5% | 2% | 3% | |
| Multiethnic | 25% | 17% | 21% | |
| Income | ||||
| Less than $25,000/year | 4% | 5% | 1% | |
| $25,001–50,000/year | 5% | 10% | 1% | |
| $50,001–75,000/year | 18% | 14% | 9% | |
| $75,001–125,000/year | 37% | 39% | 36% | |
| Greater than $125,000/year | 33% | 29% | 46% | |
| Missing | 3% | 3% | 7% | |
| Parent Political Orientation | 1.58 (0.77) | 1.70 (1.00) | 2.27 (1.23) | |
a Political orientation scores range from 1 (very liberal) to 7 (very conservative).
Descriptive statistics for each participant group for each trial type.
| Participant group | Rearing type | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Same sex as target | Different sex from target | |||||
| M | SD | 95% CI | M | SD | 95% CI | |
| Transgender | 0.78 | 0.03 | .73 - .83 | 0.64 | 0.03 | .58 - .70 |
| Control | 0.86 | 0.02 | .82 - .89 | 0.69 | 0.03 | .63 - .75 |
| Sibling | 0.80 | 0.04 | .72 - .87 | 0.62 | 0.04 | .55 - .70 |
Note. The 95% Confidence Intervals did not include .50 for any means, suggesting that participants in all groups used sex at birth to in making inferences about future preferences in both types of rearing environments.
Fig 1Scatterplots depicting correlations between age and essentialist inferences on sex-matched and other-sex rearing trials for each participant group.