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Delusions of Gender

Page 39

by Cordelia Fine


  Language Log, 158, 162

  lap-dancing clubs, out-of-office socialising at, 71–72

  lateralisation:

  language and, 137–38, 271

  in male vs. female brain, 136–40, 145, 271, 272, 277

  visuospatial tasks and, 138–39, 145, 271, 273

  lateral septum, 142

  Lawrence, Peter, 112

  leaders, women as, 62–64

  Leadership and the Sexes (Gurian and Annis), xvii, 156–57

  Lehrer, Jonah, 152–53

  Lennon, Randy, 16

  Levy, Neil, xix, 18, 91, 109, 116

  Lewontin, Richard, 166

  Liberman, Mark, 158, 162, 165, 170–71, 279

  Lincoln Logs, 268

  Logel, Christine, 33

  logic, see systemising

  Logothetis, Nikos K., 270–71

  Los Angeles Times, 139, 168

  Lynn, Matthew, 72

  macaque monkeys, 126–27, 128

  McClure, Erin, 159

  McGlone, Matthew, 28, 32

  male brain, xxvii

  aggression centres as more developed in, 99

  emotion processing in, 147–51, 156, 163

  face-interest awareness studies and, 112–16, 129, 130

  foetal testosterone surge in, xv, xxi–xxii, 99–106, 107–11, 117, 261

  gender inequalities as determined by, 91

  lateralisation in, 136–40, 145, 271, 272, 277

  left hemisphere as underdeveloped in, 105–6, 136

  localised (spotlight) connectivity of, 139, 144

  as S-type, 106

  systemising as innate characteristic of, xv, xviii, xix, xxiv, 9, 50–51, 91, 107, 109, 111, 116, 139, 144, 155–56

  verbal abilities and, 34, 136

  visuospatial processing in, 136, 139–40, 145, 146, 261, 273

  see also gender stereotypes; neurosexism

  Malebranche, Nicolas, xxiv

  Martin, Karin, 70

  Marx, David, 23, 251

  Mason, William, 127

  mathematical ability, see science and maths ability

  Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program (MOSP), 183

  mathematics, science, and engineering (MSE) careers, see science, engineering, and technology (SET) careers

  media:

  for children, see children’s books and media

  implicit associations and, 6

  oversimplification and misrepresentation of neuroscience in, 174–75

  stereotype threat cues in, 172–73

  medical profession, sexual harassment in, 73–75

  men, in female-dominated fields, 64–65

  Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus books (Gray), 81

  mental rotation tests:

  foetal testosterone and, 111, 130

  gender beliefs and, 28–29

  gender differences in, 27, 145, 250

  girls with CAH and, 121

  identity priming and, 28, 32

  Mill, John Stuart, xiii, xxiv

  Miller, Cindy, 227

  Miller, Greg, 153

  mind:

  difficulty in inferring from brain, xxvi, 140, 142, 175

  influence of social context on, xxvi, 4–13, 20–26, 28–29, 30–36, 95–96

  male vs. female, see gender stereotypes

  in newborns, 176

  prevention focus in, 34

  promotion focus in, 34

  resource allocation in, 33–34

  working memory in, see working memory

  Minds of Boys, The (Gurian and Stevens), 170

  minimal group studies, 227

  Minzer, Pamela Burgy, 40–41

  mirror neurons, 159

  mobile-interest, study of, 112–14, 115–16

  Moè, Angelica, 28–29

  Moir, Anne, xxi–xxii

  monkeys, gender-differentiated behaviour in, 103, 124–28, 269

  Moore, Celia, 104–5, 143, 165, 262

  moral reasoning, environmental priming and, 24–25

  Morantz-Sanchez, Regina Markell, 29, 78

  Morgan, Laurie, 70

  Morris, Jan, 3

  Morton, Thomas, 185–86

  mothers, working:

  cultural bias against, 57, 59, 84–85, 92

  female brain as overwhelmed in, 86

  seen as more warm than competent, 59

  unequal work load of, 92–93

  see also workplace, women in

  motion perception, 152

  motivation, gender salience and, 20–21, 22, 29

  MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), xvi, xvii, xxii

  Mullarkey, Mary, 40–41

  Murnen, Sarah, 221

  Murphy, Mary, 42

  Nash, Alison, 113–16, 198

  National Association for Single Sex Public Education (NASSPE), xvii, 163, 278–79

  National Educational Longitudinal Study (1988), 48

  National League for Opposing Woman Suffrage, 84

  Nature, 54, 157–58

  neuroconstructivism, 177

  neuroendocrinologists, 101

  neuroimaging, see brain imaging

  neuroscience:

  circular reasoning in, 171–72, 273

  media oversimplification and misrepresentation of, 174–75

  as more ‘scientific’ than psychology, 168, 169–70

  in 19th century, 132–33

  social responsibility in, 173–74, 281

  neurosexism, xv–xix, xxi, xxiv, xxvii, 154, 155–67

  educational influence of, xxviii, 162–67, 277–78

  gender inequality as reinforced by, xxviii, 172–73, 186, 237–39

  see also female brain; male brain

  Newcombe, Nora, 250

  New Republic, 129

  New York Times, 58, 129, 131–32, 171

  Nickelodeon, 222

  Nobel Prize laureates, 109, 265

  Norton, Michael, 60

  Nosek, Brian, 4, 39, 247

  nurturing:

  in girls with CAH, 126, 269

  in primates, 124, 126–28

  see also parenting

  Oberman, Lindsay, 161

  Observer, 65

  Opting Out? Why Women Really Quit Careers and Head Home (Stone), 86–87

  Orenstein, Peggy, 196, 204

  organisation-activational hypothesis, 101

  Outliers (Gladwell), 34–35

  ovaries, 100–101

  oxytocin, domestic duties as producing, 81, 82

  Packaging Girlhood (Lamb and Brown), 220–21

  Paoletti, Jo, 207–8

  paper people, see fictitious job applicant studies

  parenting:

  gender-neutral, xx, 189–91, 204, 214–16, 238

  gender stereotyping and, 79, 84–85, 87, 189–96, 198–99, 202–4

  gender-typed play and toy choice as encouraged by, 202–3

  hormone changes and, 87

  in prairie voles, 142–43

  in primates, 124, 126–28

  in rats, 88

  see also children

  Parents’ Magazine, 88

  Pease, Allan, 134, 140, 147–48, 149, 274

  Pease, Barbara, 134, 140, 147–48, 149, 274

  penis, foetal testosterone and, 106

  PET (positron emission tomography), xvi, 134, 148, 153

  Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, 76

  Pinker, Steven, 129, 130, 168, 179, 184, 190

  Pinker, Susan, xxi, 41, 90, 95, 148–49, 179

  pink princess phenomenon, 226

  PONS, see Profile of Nonverbal Sensitivity

  prairie voles, 142–43

  preoptic nucleus, 103–4

  Pre-School Activities Inventory, 121, 123

  prevention focus, 34

  Price, Cathy, 152

  primates:

  effects of prenatal hormones on brain development in, 103, 123, 125–26, 127–28

  gender-typed toy and play choice in, 124–25, 130

  nurturing behaviour in, 124, 126–28

&n
bsp; sociocultural environment of, 126–27

  proactive personality, 44

  Profile of Nonverbal Sensitivity (PONS), gender differences in, 18, 19, 159, 249

  prolactin, 87

  promotion focus, 34

  Pronin, Emily, 50, 52

  psychology, 118

  publication bias, 271

  Quarterly Journal of Science, xx

  racial attitudes, children’s assimilation of, 199–201

  Racine, Eric, 170

  rats:

  effects of hormones on brain development in, 102–5

  environmental stimuli in development of, 104–5

  parenting by, 88

  preoptic nucleus of, 103–4

  testosterone in, 104–5, 260, 262

  Reading the Mind from the Eyes test, 17, 18, 108–9, 248–49

  gender differences in, 18, 19, 264–65

  Republican National Committee, 58

  reverse inference, 151–52, 155

  rewards, as reinforcing gender stereotypes, 91–93

  rhesus monkeys, 103, 124–25

  Rhode, Deborah, 216

  Ridgeway, Cecilia, 4, 96, 246–47

  right-ear advantage, 137

  Ritter, Mary, 29–30

  Rivers, Caryl, xxviii, 105

  Rochat, Philippe, 266

  Rogers, Lesley, 37, 157, 236, 238

  Romanes, George J., 141

  Rothman, Barbara, 192–93

  Ruble, Diane, 226–27, 229

  Rudman, Laurie, 59, 61, 83–84, 224

  Russett, Cynthia, xxv, 132

  Ryan, Michelle, 24, 64

  Same Difference (Barnett and Rivers), 105

  sample size, in brain imaging studies, 137, 138, 150

  Sax, Leonard, xvii, 112, 163–65, 168–69, 191, 205, 276–77, 278

  Schaffer, Amanda, 16, 119, 250

  Schilt, Kirsten, 54

  Scholastic Aptitude Test, 50–51, 251

  Science, 50–51, 139, 144, 180, 181

  science, engineering, and technology (SET) careers:

  ‘female’ traits suppressed by women in, 50–51, 52

  sexual discrimination in, 51–52, 69

  sexual harassment in, 73

  women as intrinsically unsuited for, 90–91

  women’s representation in, 118–19, 254

  science and maths ability:

  environmental influences on, 182–84

  foetal testosterone levels linked to, 100, 129

  gender inequalities in, 27, 29, 90–91, 95, 110, 129–30, 179–84, 190, 250, 277–78

  Greater Male Variability hypothesis and, 179–80, 185, 280

  implicit associations and, 35–36, 39

  intuition and, 109–10

  sense of belonging and, 48

  stereotype threat and, 30–31, 32–33, 35–36, 42–43, 50–51, 173, 184, 252

  Science Daily, 145

  ‘Science of Sex Differences in Science and Mathematics, The’, 139

  scientific process, 238

  speculation in, 153

  Scientists Anonymous (Fara), 54

  Scottish Qualifications Authority, 8

  ‘second shift’, 80

  securities industry, sexual discrimination in, 68–69, 73

  Sedgwick, William T., 67, 68, 75

  Sekaquaptewa, Denise, 35–36

  self-assessment:

  gender differences in, 48–50

  as influenced by environment, 52–53

  role models and, 252

  self-concept, 7–8

  social identity and, 10–13, 26, 231–32, 247–48

  self-reporting bias, 16–17, 120

  Selmi, Michael, 68–69, 72–73, 76, 83

  Seuss, Dr., 222

  Sex in Education (Clarke), 166

  Sexing the Body (Fausto-Sterling), 138

  sexual discrimination:

  benevolent vs. hostile, 67–68

  intentional, 67–77, 92

  as justified by essentialist theory, 185–86

  seen as no longer prevalent, 41, 186

  shifting criteria and, 60–62

  unconscious, 54–66, 92

  sexual harassment, 72–77

  as downplayed by victims, 73–75

  Sexual Paradox, The (Pinker), xxi, 41, 90

  SHBG (sex hormone binding globulin), 262, 268–69

  Shields, Stephanie, 178

  Silverberg, Alice, xxvii, 62

  Sinclair, Stacey, 10

  Singer, Tania, 159–61

  Smith, Joan, xxiii

  Smith, Kara, 193

  social context, see environment, sociocultural

  social identity, 8, 24

  salience of, 29, 107

  self-concept and, 10–13, 26, 107, 231–32, 247–48

  of women, 19, 26

  see also gender salience; group membership salience

  social norms, see environment, sociocultural

  Sommer, Iris, 137–38

  Sommers, Christina Hoff, 118

  songbirds, effect of male hormones in, 101–2, 259

  Spelke, Elizabeth, 46, 116

  Spencer, Steven, 31

  Stanford University, 50–51

  Stapel, Diederik, 23

  status quo, gender hardwiring as justification for, 91, 185–86

  status-seeking, testosterone and, 36–38

  Steele, Claude, 42

  Steele, Jennifer, 9–10, 95–96

  Steinem, Gloria, 89

  stereotype threat, 251

  advertising as cues for, 43

  cues for, 31–32, 172–73, 251

  emotional investment and, 35–36, 42

  gender salience and, xxvi, 44, 236

  maths ability and, 30–31, 32–33, 35–36, 42–43, 50–51, 173, 184, 252

  as reinforced by belief in innateness of ability, 184–85

  role models as counter to, 36, 252

  and sense of belonging, 42–44

  working memory and, 33, 35, 42, 252

  Stevens, Kathy, 170

  Stone, Pamela, 86–87

  Stringfellow, Peter, 71

  Stringfellows, 71–72

  strip clubs, out-of-office socialising at, 70, 71–72

  Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth (SMPY), 181

  Subjection of Women, The (Mill), xiii

  Summers, Lawrence, 129–30, 168, 184, 190, 191

  Sympathy and Science (Morantz-Sanchez), 29, 78

  systemising:

  and attention to detail, 265

  foetal testosterone and, 107, 109, 111, 116, 129, 261–62

  in girls with CAH, 120–21

  as male trait, xv, xviii, xix, xxiv, 9, 50–51, 91, 107, 111, 116, 139, 144, 155–56

  and women in science, 118–19

  by young boys, 116

  Systemising Quotient (SQ), 15, 18, 110

  Tajfel, Henri, 227

  Tavris, Carol, 261

  temporal cortex, 152

  testes, 100–101

  testosterone, xv, 268–69

  amniotic, 108, 110–11, 122, 262–63, 264, 265–66

  cognitive performance and, 37–38

  competition and, 252

  maternal, 108, 122, 262

  in new parents, 87

  in rats, 104–5, 260, 262

  status-seeking and, 36–38

  and unequal division of domestic chores, 81

  testosterone, foetal, 262–63

  autism linked to, 106, 261–62

  in brain development, xv, xxi–xxii, 99–106, 107–11, 117, 261

  and children’s toy and play choices, 110–11, 121–22

  congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) and, 13, 119–23, 231

  empathy and, 107–9

  flimsiness of evidence on effects of, 117, 261

  left brain underdevelopment and, 105–6, 136

  maths ability linked to, 100, 129

  penis and, 106

  in primates, 103, 123, 125–26, 127–28

  systemising and, 107, 109, 111, 116, 12
9, 261–62

  Thailand, maths ability in, 181

  Thatcher, Margaret, xxviii

  Theory of Mind, 152, 266–67

  Thorndike, Edward, xxiii, 178–79

  Tichenor, Veronica, 82

  tomboyism, 268

  transsexuals, colleagues’ perceptions of, 3, 54–55

  Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS; 2003), 39

  Tuck, Vicky, 165, 166

  Turner, John, 247–48

  Turner-Bowker, Diane, 220

  Uhlmann, Eric, 58–59

  Ulrich, Mabel, 78, 79, 83, 84, 85–86, 89

  United Kingdom, maths ability in, 181

  Vancouver Sun, 129–30

  vasopressin, 142

  verbal abilities:

  female brain and, 139

  gender stereotyping of, 34

  male brain and, 136

  vertical segregation, of sexes, 91, 92

  vervet monkeys, 124, 125

  veterinary medicine, 118

  visuospatial skills:

  gender differences in, 27, 51, 136, 138–40, 145, 249–50, 261, 273

  identity priming and, 28–29, 32

  lateralisation and, 138–39, 145, 271, 273

  Wahlsten, Douglas, 138

  Wallentin, Mikkel, 138, 271

  Walton, Gregory, 31

  Weil, Elizabeth, 163

  Weisberg, Deena Skolnick, 154, 171–72, 173, 174

  Weitzman, Lenore, 222

  Weitzman, Nancy, 201–2

  Wexler, Bruce, 177

  What Could He Be Thinking? (Gurian), xvi–xvii, 81–82, 156

  Whitman, Walt, 7

  Why Aren’t More Women in Science? (Ceci, ed.), 112–13, 144, 146

  Why Gender Matters (Sax), xvii, 112

  Why Mars and Venus Collide (Gray), 140, 155–56

  Why Men Don’t Listen and Women Can’t Read Maps (Pease and Pease), 140, 147–48

  Williams, Christine, 64–65

  Witelson, Sandra, 148–51, 274

  womanly intuition, see empathy

  Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, 75

  women, in male-dominated fields, 27–39, 118–19

  as endowed with male minds, xix–xx, 40

  as intrinsically unsuited, 90–91, 233–34

  as needing to outperform men, 29–30, 65

  as role models, 36, 252

  and sense of not belonging, 40–53

  see also stereotype threat

  women’s suffrage, 84, 131–32, 234

  working memory, stereotype threat and, 33, 35, 42, 252

  workplace, women in:

  backlash against agentic traits in, 61

  and competent/cold vs. incompetent/warm dichotomy, 62–63

  as excluded from out-of-office socialising, 70–72

  gender inequalities and, xxi, 41, 91, 92–95, 186

  gender pay gap and, 65–66, 85, 257

  motherhood penalty and, 57, 59, 84–85, 92

  overt sexism towards, 67–77

  and sense of not belonging, 51–52

  in SET jobs, 50–52, 69, 73, 118–19, 254

  sexual harassment of, 72–77

 

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