Building on error management theory and heuristic decision making, we conducted three studies manipulating the sex of the sender and receiver of messages and asked observers to rate the sender’s sexism (Studies 1-3), pleasantness, and professionalism (Studies 2-3). We also examined concern for political correctness (CPC) and social justice attitudes (Study 1), ambivalence toward men (Study 2), and neosexism (Study 3) as moderators of respondent ratings. Across all studies, we found that when the receiver was female, the sender was rated as significantly more sexist, especially when the sender was male. Although CPC, social justice, and ambivalence toward men failed to interact with scenario conditions, neosexism levels resulted in stronger sexism ratings in the male sender-female receiver condition.
➤ Version 3 (2023-05-03) (published in Journal of Open Inquiry in the Behavioral Sciences) |
Matthew Grawitch, Kristi Lavigne and Srikanth Mudigonda (2023). It’s Not What Was Said But Who Said It To Whom: Interactant Sex Affects Attributions of Sexism in Ambiguous Situations. Researchers.One. https://researchers.one/articles/23.02.00001v3
Matthew Grawitch, Kristi Lavigne and Srikanth Mudigonda (2023). It’s Not What Was Said But Who Said It To Whom: Interactant Sex Affects Attributions of Sexism in Ambiguous Situations. Journal of Open Inquiry in the Behavioral Sciences. https://doi.org/10.58408/issn.2992-9253.2023.01.01.00000003
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