Investigation of gender bias in the mental imagery of faces
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Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
Abstract
People tend to think of the prototypical person as a man more than as a woman, but this bias has
primarily been observed in language-based tasks. Here, we investigated whether this bias is also present
in the mental imagery of faces. A preregistered cross-cultural reverse-correlation study including
participants from six WEIRD and non-WEIRD countries varying in gender equality (i.e., China,
Ghana, Norway, Pakistan, Turkey, and the US (N = 645) unexpectedly suggested that people imagine
the face of a generic “person” more as a woman than as a man. Replicating this unexpected result, a
second preregistered study (N = 115) showed that U.S. participants imagine the face of a typical person
as being more similar to their imagined face of a woman than of a man. We discuss explanations
for these unexpected findings, including the possibility that the prototypical person is male-biased—
consistent with previous work—but the default face may be female-biased.
Description
Research Article