Anonymously male: Social media avatar icons are implicitly male and resistant to change

被引:9
作者
Bailey, April H. [1 ]
LaFrance, Marianne [1 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Dept Psychol, New Haven, CT USA
来源
CYBERPSYCHOLOGY-JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOCIAL RESEARCH ON CYBERSPACE | 2016年 / 10卷 / 04期
关键词
Social media; gender; avatars; system justification theory; threat; SYSTEM-JUSTIFICATION; SEX; LANGUAGE; PREJUDICE; REDUCE; STEREOTYPES; CHILDRENS; BELIEFS; IMAGES; WOMEN;
D O I
10.5817/CP2016-4-8
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
When asked to pick a typical human, people are more likely to pick a man than a woman, a phenomenon reflecting androcentrism. Social media websites provide a relevant context in which to study androcentrism since many websites aim to provide users with an ostensibly gender-neutral icon if users do not upload one of their own images. In our first study, 50 male and female online participants (M-age = 35.70) rated whether actual avatar icons from highly trafficked social media websites are perceived as gender-neutral. Using bi-polar scales from woman to man participants reported that overall the icons appeared to be more male-typed than gender neutral. In Study 2, we investigated whether adding more female-typed icons would discourage or promote androcentric thinking. An online sample of 608 male and female participants (M-age = 33.76) viewed either 12 avatar icons that reflected the over-representation of male-typed icons or 12 that included an equal number of male and female-typed icons. Participants were then asked to produce an example of a typical person. Finally, we measured political ideology on two liberal-conservative scales. We found evidence that exposure to an equal number of male-typed and female-typed avatar icons generated reactance among political conservatives, and thus may have constituted an ideological threat. Conservatives who saw an equal number of male-typed and female-typed icons were twice as likely to come up with a man as a typical person compared to conservatives who saw an over-representation of male-typed avatar icons. Consistent with system justification theory, these findings show how male-centric thinking is also evident in a seemingly gender-neutral online context.
引用
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页数:14
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