9: Personality and gender Flashcards

1
Q

What are sex differences?

A

average differences between women and men in personality or behaviour

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2
Q

What are gender stereotypes?

A

beliefs about how men and women differ or are supposed to differ, in contrast to what the actual differences are

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3
Q

What is the difference between the minimalist position and the maximalist position in the sex difference debate?

A
  • Those who describe sex differences as small and inconsequential take the minimalist position
  • the maximalist position argue that the magnitude of sex differences is comparable to the magnitude of many other effects in psychology and should not be trivialized
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4
Q

What does the Socialization theory state about sex differences?

A

that boys and girls become different because notions of ‘masculinity’ and ‘femininity’ are reinforced by parents, teachers and the media

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5
Q

What does the learning theory (Bandura) state about sex differences?

A

That boys and girls learn by observing the behaviours of others, called models, of their own sex.

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6
Q

What does the social role theory state about sex differences?

A

According to social role theory, sex differences originate because men and women are distributed differently into different occupational and family roles.

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7
Q

What does hormonal theories state about sex differences?

A

argue that men and women differ not because of the external social environment but, rather, because the sexes have different underlying hormones. It is these physiological differences, not differential social treatment, which cause boys and girls to diverge over development.

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8
Q

According to the evolutionary psychology perspective, why does men and women differ in some domains, but not in others?

A

The sexes are predicted to be essentially the same in all the domains in which they have faced the same adaptive problems over human evolutionary history.
But different in the domains where they have faced different adaptive problems

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9
Q

What does an integrated theory of sex differences state?

A

This theory would take all of these levels of analysis (hormonal, social and evolutionary) into account because they are clearly compatible with each other

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10
Q

meta-analysis of temperament in children between the ages of 3 and 13 suggests two gender differences of moderate magnitude, which?

A

Girls show more inhibitory control and boys show higher levels of surgency

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11
Q

The five-factor model provides a broad set of personality traits within which we can examine whether women and men differ.
What does research say about extraversion?

A

relatively small difference in extraversion between men and women (d = 0.15 / d = -0.10)

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12
Q

The five-factor model provides a broad set of personality traits within which we can examine whether women and men differ.
What does research say about agreeableness?

A

Medium gender difference indicating that women score slighly higher than men (d = -0.32)

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13
Q

The five-factor model provides a broad set of personality traits within which we can examine whether women and men differ.
What does research say about agressiveness?

A

Aggressiveness falls at the opposite end of agreeableness - men are more physically aggressive than women (d = 0.86 / 0.63 / 0.40)

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14
Q

The five-factor model provides a broad set of personality traits within which we can examine whether women and men differ.
What does research say about conscientiousness?

A

a negligible sex difference (d = −0.14) on overall levels of Conscientiousness

When looking at sub-categories men are slighly more industrious and women slighly more orderly

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15
Q

The five-factor model provides a broad set of personality traits within which we can examine whether women and men differ.
What does research say about emotional stability?

A

Emotional Stability shows the largest sex difference (d = −0.49 / -0.40) in the five-factor model, indicating that women are moderately lower than men on this dimension

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16
Q

The five-factor model provides a broad set of personality traits within which we can examine whether women and men differ.
What does research say about Intellect-Openness to experience?

A

no sex differences (d = −0.07 / 0.05) in Intellect–Openness to experience

But when looking at sub-categories men score highter in intellect (0.22) and women score higher in openness (-0.27)

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17
Q

What does research say about sex differences in self-esteem?

A

The overall effect size is relatively small (d = 0.21), with males scoring slightly higher than females in self-esteem

Der ses svingninger med alderen

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18
Q

What is the people–things dimension?

A

refers to the nature of vocational interests.

  • People who score toward the ‘things’ end of the dimension prefer vocations that deal with impersonal objects – machines, tools or materials
  • Those scoring toward the ‘people’ end of the dimension prefer social occupations, which involve thinking about others, caring for others or directing others
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19
Q

According to the people-things dimensions, which sex differences do we see?

A

The correlation between sex and the people–things dimension is 0.56, or a d of roughly 1.35, which means that men are more likely to score at the things end of the dimension, and women are more likely to score at the people end

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20
Q

How does men and women differ according to jealousy?

A
  • men have been predicted to become more jealous than women in response to cues to a sexual infidelity (utroskab).
  • Women have been predicted to become more jealous than men in response to cues to the long-term diversion of a mate’s commitment, such as emotional involvement with someone else
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21
Q

In the search for adrogyny, what does the masculinity dimension contain?

A

items reflecting assertiveness, boldness, dominance, self-sufficiency and instrumentality.

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22
Q

In the search for adrogyny, what does the femininity dimension contain?

A

items that reflected nurturance, expression of emotions and empathy.

23
Q

When are you labelled as androgynous?

A

When you score high on both dimensions (masculinity and femininity)

24
Q

When are you labelled gender undifferentiated?

A

When you scored low on femininity and low on masculinity

25
Q

The new androgynous conception of sex roles was not without its critics. What was the critisism about?

A

One criticism pertained to the items on the inventories and their correlations with each other. Researchers seemed to assume that masculinity and femininity were single dimensions

Another criticism goes to the heart of the androgyny concept.
It turns out that several studies have found that masculinity and femininity, indeed, consist of a single, bipolar trait, instead of consisting of two separate dimensions, masculinity and femininity. Those who score high on masculinity, for example, tend to score low on femininity.

= that masculinity and femininity are independent of each other, no longer seems tenable.

26
Q

Gender stereotypes have three components, which?

A
  1. cognitive component (deals with the ways in which we form social categories).
    □ For example, we may categorize all men as those who play around and are reluctant to commit versus those who are faithful and invest heavily in their children
  2. affective component.
    □ You may feel hostile or warm toward someone simply because you place that person in a particular social category
  3. behavioural component.
    □ For example, you may discriminate against someone simply because he belongs in a social category
27
Q

Does culture influence the gender stereotypes against men and women?

A

Although there are some variations from culture to culture, it is remarkable that the content of gender stereotypes – the attributes that we believe men and women possess – is highly similar across cultures

28
Q

gender stereotypes can have important consequences for men and women. Where can these damage people?

A

where it counts most – in their health, their jobs, their chances for advancement and their social reputations.

29
Q

what does the parental investment theory say about sex differences (Trivers)?

A

The sex making the largest investment in offspring (via gamete production, lactation, nurturing and protection) will be the more discriminating sex.
The sex that invests less will compete for sexual access to the higher investing sex.

30
Q

What is the attempt in intrasexual competition?

A

the attempt is to exclude others of the same sex from competing for a possible male

= konkurrence mellem samme køn

31
Q

What is the attempt in intersexual competition?

A

The attempt is to make sure a possible mate chooses to mate with you

= konkurrence ift. andet køn

32
Q

sex differences in various domains which would help males in their efforts to exclude other males from access to females, includes… ?

A
  • physical size
  • physical ability
  • assertiveness
  • aggression

= sex differences that possible originated from intrasexual competition

33
Q

There are differences in the willingness to engage in casual sex between females and males, why? and which sex is more prone to engage in it?

A

Males are more prone to engage in casual sex (d = 0.8)

An explanation is that females are taking a higher risk in engaging in this sexual behavior

= større risiko for at få børn, en far der ikke er engageret mv.

34
Q

According to evolutionary psychology, how and why does men and women differ in their intelligence?

A

Men and women differ because of the men being hunters and women being gatheres.

This results in:
women having more superior memory and spatial location recall

and men having superior spatial perception

because this where the intelligences needed for their tasks

35
Q

Simon Baron-Cohen developed the SQ-EQ score, what does this consist of?

A

a score for emphathizing (EQ) and a score for systemizing (SQ) resulting in different brain “types” ranging from extreme type E - type E - Type B - Type S - extreme type S

36
Q

Which “type” based on the SQ-EQ score, is often associated with autism?

A

Extreme type S

37
Q

Does age have anyting to do with gender differences in personality?

A

YES!

research shows that there are sex differences in some of the traits which are changing as we age.

e. g.
- men and women become more alike in neurotisism as we age

but some traits are relatively stable
- e.g. agreeableness

38
Q

Is it true/false that social and parental expectations can exaggerate or even create differences between genders?

A

It is true! BUT social factors such as gender inegalitarianism may also obscure some differences as well

e. g. Parents do not expect sex differences in verbal abilities, and does not speak more often to girls than boys, and yet there are differences in:
- the age of when they speak
- their growth of vocabulary
- their vocabulary abilities in adulthood

39
Q

Is it true/false that there is a “one-size-fits-all” explanation for differenes in personality traits among gender as we age?

A

False.

40
Q

How does the role of gender equality in the society affect gender differences in preferences?

A

The more gender equality - the more average gender difference in preferences

= ikke som man umiddelbart skulle tro

41
Q

What is effective polygony?

A

Among males, a few males will sire many offspring, whereas some will have none at all.

42
Q

how is global self-esteem defined?

A

as ‘the level of global regard that one has for the self as a person’

- Global self-esteem is associated with many aspects of functioning and is central to mental health. 
	□ Those with high self-esteem appear to cope better with the stresses and strains of daily life.
43
Q

what are the “gamble” of the male mind an expression for?

A

That the male way of developing a brain is a gamble

The male “type” mind appears riskier to develop - e.g. extreme systemizing (which is characteristic of men) is characteristic of autism, but extreme empathizing does not have a parallel pathology (characteristic of women)

when looking at a normal distribution men are more heavily represented at the extremes.

44
Q

why do males pursue more risky strategies for individual behaviors and developmental patterns?

A

Because they have higher chance of being succesful (e.g. winning in the big lottery).

Being highly succesful as a male affects your reproductive succes more dramatically than being succesful as a woman.

45
Q

in which ways does status affect the number of reproductive partners for men?

A

Higher status = more partners

Lower status = one or none partners

46
Q

what are the aspects of the big 5 traits?

A

Extraversion:

  • assertiveness (dominant, outspoken, active)
  • enthusism (sociable, playful, fun-loving)

Agreeableness:

  • compassion (warm, emphatic, kind)
  • Politeness (considerate, unaggressive, compliant)

Conscientiousness:

  • Industriousness (hard-working, self-disciplined)
  • Orderliness (neat, careful, punctual)

Neurotisism:

  • Volatility (temperamental, irritable, easily upset)
  • Withdrawel (anxious, depressed, vulnerable)

Openness/intellect

  • Openness (artistic, creative, perceptive)
  • Intellect (smart, intellectual, philosophical)
47
Q

What role does confidence play in relation to gender differences?

A

Boys often show greater confidence than girls.

BUT:
Gender differences in confidence are neither necessary or sufficient for development of performance differences between genders.

48
Q

How might sex differences produced by evolution be obscured by social forces?

A

Some researchers who highlight the role of society in creating gender differences expect that in more gender-egalitarian societies, gender differences should be smaller

BUT:
In general, opposite results are found!
- May indicate that in gender-inegalitarian societies (societies with little amount of equality), people tend to compare themselves to their own gender, while those in gender- egalitarian (more equality, fx skandinavia) societies people compare themselves to those of both genders.
= Comparisons against one’s one gender tend to obscure true gender differences.

49
Q

What is it called when you compare yourself to some of your own group?

A

Reference group effect

e.g. when comparing yourself with your own gender when evaluating how high you are.

50
Q

What are the 2 aspects of extraversion?

A

Extraversion:

  • assertiveness (dominant, outspoken, active)
  • enthusism (sociable, playful, fun-loving)
51
Q

what are the 2 aspects of agreeableness?

A

Agreeableness:

  • compassion (warm, emphatic, kind)
  • Politeness (considerate, unaggressive, compliant)
52
Q

what are the 2 aspects of conscientiousness?

A

Conscientiousness:

  • Industriousness (hard-working, self-disciplined)
  • Orderliness (neat, careful, punctual)
53
Q

what are the 2 aspects of neurotisism?

A

Neurotisism:

  • Volatility (temperamental, irritable, easily upset)
  • Withdrawel (anxious, depressed, vulnerable)
54
Q

what are the 2 aspects of openness?

A

Openness/intellect

  • Openness (artistic, creative, perceptive)
  • Intellect (smart, intellectual, philosophical)