Title: Ch 13 personality and emotion
111 13 08
- Ch 13 personality and emotion
- Ch 14 approaches to self
- Ch 15 personality and social interaction
- Ch 16 sex differences in personality
- And associated lecture material
211 13 08
- Ch 16
- 1. Sex differences in personality
- 2. Explanations for sex differences
- 3. Implicit sex differences
3Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Small-group questions
- Does sex matter for personality?
- If so, how do males females differ?
4Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- History of research on sex differences
- In 1974,
- Men - slightly better at spatial ability tasks
- Women - slightly better at verbal ability tasks
- Men - definitely more aggressive
5Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- History of research on sex differences
- Subsequent to 1974
- In 1992, fed. government grants
- Authors often required to analyze
- even if not focus of interest
- Should all analyze for sex differences?
6Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Effect size
- An index of the strength of a difference
- D .20
- D .50
- D .80
- Here, effect size means
- How large the sex difference is
7Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences
- 1. Can men throw a ball further?
- D
- 2. Does one sex do better in grades?
- D
8Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences
- 3. Are women better at verbal ability tasks?
- Yes, but difference is
- D
- 4. Are men better at math?
- Yes, but difference is
- D
- However, for spatial rotation tasks, D
9Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex diffs in early-appearing personality
- Called temperament
- 1)
- ability to control inappropriate responses
- Young girls better at this, d
- 2)
- Ability to be aware of
- Young girls do better at this, d
- Why so?
10Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex diffs in early-appearing personality
- 3)
- Related to approach, high activity, impulsivity
- Boys are higher in this, d
- Impulsivity
- lack of inhibitory control
- More rambunctious, more discipline issues
11Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex diffs in early-appearing personality
- 4)
- Feelings, displays of distress, sadness
- No sex difference in children
- Girls thus not more emotional at this age
- Sex differences in Big 5 its facets
12Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and big 5
- Extraversion as a whole
- Extraversion facets
- Women higher in
(but small d) - Men higher in
(again, small d) - Biggest difference is that on
(d .50) - Men more dominant, interruptive
- Why so?
13Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and big 5
- Agreeableness as whole
- D
- Agreeableness facets
- Women - higher in trust (d -.25)
- Women - higher in tender-mindedness, d -.97
- Related, women , d
-.60 - Why so?
14Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and big 5
- Aggression
- A -
- Men more aggressive,
- Especially (e.g., TAT,
d .86) - Smaller SR differences (d .40)
- Why larger differences for projective tests?
15Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and big 5
- Violent crime
- Men commit
- Sex main effect
- moderation with higher age
16Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
17Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and big 5
- Conscientiousness
- Neuroticism
- At facet level, relations are smaller
- Why are women higher in neuroticism?
- Openness (d -.03)
18Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and other traits
- Self-esteem
- However, age differences
- Peaks at age 15-18,
- Then declines
- Over 60,
19Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences and other traits
- Large sex diff in attitude to casual sex,
- Men more desired lifetime partners,
- Why are men more interested in casual sex?
20Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Vocational interests people or things?
- Machines, tools
- Carpenters, contractors, farmers, physicists
- High school teacher
- Social workers
- Religious counselor
- Sex difference
21Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Sex differences in depression
- In childhood,
- At puberty
- Puberty - much tougher on girls than boys
- Why is puberty tougher on girls?
- Diagnosis frequency of major depression
- lifetime incidence among men
- lifetime incidence among women
22Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Why do sex differences exist?
- Two primary theories
- 1) genetic basis
- 2) culture
23Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Genetic basis of sex differences
- Must operate on bodies somehow
- Testosterone, estrogen
24Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Responsible for
- Body hair
- Broad shoulders
- Deep voice
- Height, muscle
25Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Testosterone
- Injecting testosterone more aggressive animals
- Male criminals, football players, fraternity
members - More testosterone than average
26Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Where evolutionary psychology falls short
- 1) large cultural diversity
- 2) dramatic changes over recent history
- Evolution is
27Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Culture reinforces sex differences
- inside the house house duties
- outside the house
unsupervised - Paralleled by adults
- more home-making, child care
- more bread-winner, yard work
28Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Award winning child books
- Holding household objects (broom, pots, pans)
- Holding production equipment (pitchforks, plow,
gun) - Supports idea of gender roles
- differential norms for boys, girls, men, women
29Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Important to
- Nigeria, Pakistan
- rigid gender roles, inequality between sexes
- Netherlands, Germany (Iceland!)
- less distinct roles for men and women
30Chapter 16 Sex, Gender, Personality
- Gender roles vary over time
- Women working
- 1960
- 1998
- From 1960 to now
- From 6 to 43 of medical students are women
- From 3 to 45 of law students are women
- Housework
- 1960
- 1995
31Implicit Gender Identity
- Socialization influences self-concept
- Masculine traits
- Feminine traits
- On self-report scales, small/moderate sex diffs
- However, such influences
- May be stronger at
- Self-concept as examined by IAT
32Block 3 not me/feminine vs. me/masculine
- Not me assertive me
- Or ambitious or
- Feminine soft masculine
- them
- I
- it
- warm
- decisive
- self
- tender
- me
33Block 5 not me/masculine vs. me/feminine
- Not me stable me
- Or dominant or
- masculine other feminine
- them
- masculine
- feminine
- self
- rational
- my
- competitive
- their
34Greenwald Farnham Implicit Gender Identity
- Are men more implicitly masculine?
- Implicit self-concept,
- Explicit self-concept,
- Thus, stronger effects at implicit level
- Why so?
35Nosek Gender and Math
- Further, men do better at math
- Why? discrimination?
- They choose non-math majors
- A matter of personal preference then?
- Yes, but where do such prefs come from?
- Preference shaped by invisible forces
36Nosek Gender and Math
Male
math
me
37Nosek Gender and Math
Male
math
me
38Nosek Gender and Math
- Conclusions
- 1. Your preferences (e.g., for math or arts)
- 2. Preferences shaped by
- (a) stereotype
- (b) gender self-concept