ICC   25427
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACION EN CIENCIAS DE LA COMPUTACION
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Half a Century of Stereotyping Associations Between Gender and Intellectual Ability in Films
Autor/es:
VALERIA TIFFENBERG; EDGAR ALTSZYLER; RAMIRO H. GALVEZ
Revista:
SEX ROLES
Editorial:
Springer
Referencias:
Año: 2019
ISSN:
0360-0025
Resumen:
A particularly longstanding, prevalent, and well-documented stereotype is the belief that men possess higher-level cognitiveabilities than women do. This brilliance = male stereotype has been shown to be endorsed even by children as young as 6-years-old and is believed to be a factor driving the underrepresentation of women in STEM fields. Motivated by the fact that cultural products serve as a source for acquiring individual values and behaviors, we study the presence of this stereotype in a large collection of movie transcripts covering half a century of Western-world film history (n = 11,550). Concretely, we use natural language processing techniques to quantify associations between gender pronouns and high-level cognitive ability-related words. Overall, our estimates suggest that, at an aggregate level, the brilliance = male stereotype is effectively present in films and that movies specifically targeted at children contain this stereotypical association. Moreover, this pattern seems to have been quite persistent for the last 50 years.