The colour of gender stereotyping.

Despite legislative attempts to eliminate gender stereotyping from society, the propensity to evaluate people on the basis of their sex remains a pernicious social problem. Noting the critical interplay between cultural and cognitive factors in the establishment of stereotypical beliefs, the current investigation explored the extent to which culturally transmitted colour-gender associations (i.e., pink is for girls, blue is for boys) set the stage for the automatic activation and expression of gender stereotypes. Across six experiments, the results demonstrated that (1) consumer choice for children's goods is dominated by gender-stereotyped colours (Experiment 1); (2) colour-based stereotypic associations guide young children's behaviour (Experiment 2); (3) colour-gender associations automatically activate associated stereotypes in adulthood (Experiments 3-5); and (4) colour-based stereotypic associations bias impressions of male and female targets (Experiment 6). These findings indicate that, despite prohibitions against stereotyping, seemingly innocuous societal practices may continue to promote this mode of thought.

[1]  Curtis D. Hardin,et al.  Automatic Stereotyping , 1996 .

[2]  C. Macrae,et al.  Social cognition: thinking categorically about others. , 2000, Annual review of psychology.

[3]  P. Frassanito,et al.  Pink and blue: the color of gender , 2008, Child's Nervous System.

[4]  P. Devine Stereotypes and prejudice: Their automatic and controlled components. , 1989 .

[5]  Laurie A. Rudman,et al.  Implicit and Explicit Attitudes Toward Female Authority , 2000 .

[6]  Peggy Kahn,et al.  Rising Tide: Gender Equality and Cultural Change Around the World , 2004, Perspectives on Politics.

[7]  G. Levy Gender-Typed and Non-Gender-Typed Category Awareness in Toddlers , 1999 .

[8]  T. Britt,et al.  The Interactive Effects of Homosexual Speech and Sexual Orientation on the Stigmatization of Men , 2006 .

[9]  H. Eysenck A critical and experimental study of colour preferences , 1941 .

[10]  Sarah Hall Sternglanz,et al.  Infant clothing: Sex labeling for strangers , 1985 .

[11]  C. Macrae,et al.  PROCESSING LOAD AND MEMORY FOR STEREOTYPE-BASED INFORMATION , 1993 .

[12]  Karin S. Frey,et al.  Development of gender constancy and selective attention to same-sex models. , 1975, Child development.

[13]  J. Hyde,et al.  The Gender Similarities Hypothesis , 2005 .

[14]  T. K. Srull,et al.  The Role of Category Accessibility in the Interpretation of Information About Persons: Some Determinants and Implications , 1979 .

[15]  T. K. Srull,et al.  A Dual process model of impression formation , 1988 .

[16]  C. Macrae,et al.  A boy primed Sue: feature‐based processing and person construal , 2007 .

[17]  P. Devine,et al.  Self-directed versus other-directed affect as a consequence of prejudice-related discrepancies. , 1993 .

[18]  Joanne L. Brebner,et al.  Dude looks like a lady: Exploring the malleability of person categorization , 2009 .

[19]  G. Bodenhausen,et al.  Social stereotypes and information-processing strategies: the impact of task complexity. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[20]  Serge Guimond,et al.  Culture, gender, and the self: variations and impact of social comparison processes. , 2007, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[21]  Susan T. Fiske,et al.  The Ambivalent Sexism Inventory: Differentiating hostile and benevolent sexism. , 1996 .

[22]  Laurie A. Rudman,et al.  Feminized management and backlash toward agentic women: the hidden costs to women of a kinder, gentler image of middle managers. , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[23]  Charles F. Halverson,et al.  A schematic processing model of sex typing and stereotyping in children. , 1981 .

[24]  Linda R. Tropp,et al.  A meta-analytic test of intergroup contact theory. , 2006, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[25]  Y. Goshen-Gottstein,et al.  Perceptual integrality of sex and identity of faces: further evidence for the single-route hypothesis. , 2002, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[26]  C. Neil Macrae,et al.  Stereotypes as energy-saving devices: A peek inside the cognitive toolbox. , 1994 .

[27]  D. Perrett,et al.  What Gives a Face its Gender? , 1993, Perception.

[28]  C. Macrae,et al.  A face with a cue: exploring the inevitability of person categorization , 2007 .

[29]  Christopher B. Mayhorn,et al.  Champagne, beer, or coffee? A corpus of gender-related and neutral words , 2004, Behavior research methods, instruments, & computers : a journal of the Psychonomic Society, Inc.

[30]  J. S. Bridges,et al.  Pink Or Blue , 1993 .

[31]  D. Ames,et al.  Inside the mind reader's tool kit: projection and stereotyping in mental state inference. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[32]  M. Lawrynowicz [Children's department]. , 1974, Pielegniarka i polozna.

[33]  J. Warin The Attainment of Self-Consistency Through Gender in Young Children , 2000 .

[34]  T. K. Srull,et al.  Person memory and judgment. , 1989, Psychological review.

[35]  R. Josephs,et al.  A burden of proof: Stereotype relevance and gender differences in math performance. , 1999 .

[36]  J. Bargh The cognitive monster: The case against the controllability of automatic stereotype effects. , 1999 .

[37]  J. Bargh What have we been priming all these years? On the development, mechanisms, and ecology of nonconscious social behavior. , 2006, European journal of social psychology.

[38]  T. Garth The color preferences of five hundred and fifty-nine full-blood Indians , 1922 .

[39]  Jason P. Mitchell,et al.  What's in a Forename? Cue Familiarity and Stereotypical Thinking ☆ ☆☆ ★ , 2002 .

[40]  A. Pomerleau,et al.  Pink or blue: Environmental gender stereotypes in the first two years of life , 1990 .

[41]  S. Spencer,et al.  Stereotype Threat and Women's Math Performance , 1999 .

[42]  S. Bem The measurement of psychological androgyny. , 1974, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[43]  A. Eagly,et al.  Gender and the evaluation of leaders: A meta-analysis. , 1992 .

[44]  M. Banaji,et al.  The development of implicit intergroup cognition , 2008, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[45]  S. Karau,et al.  Role congruity theory of prejudice toward female leaders. , 2002, Psychological review.

[46]  Lynn S. Liben,et al.  Developmental Intergroup Theory , 2007 .

[47]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Math = male, me = female, therefore math ≠ me. , 2002 .

[48]  T. Pettigrew Intergroup contact theory. , 1998, Annual review of psychology.

[49]  Steven L. Neuberg,et al.  A Continuum of Impression Formation, from Category-Based to Individuating Processes: Influences of Information and Motivation on Attention and Interpretation , 1990 .

[50]  R. Crisp,et al.  Reducing Stereotype Threat by Blurring Intergroup Boundaries , 2006, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[51]  Martin Gründl,et al.  Beautycheck - Ursachen und Folgen von Attraktivität , 2003 .

[52]  Alexa A. Albert,et al.  Age patterns in the development of children's gender-role stereotypes , 1983 .

[53]  A. Treisman,et al.  A feature-integration theory of attention , 1980, Cognitive Psychology.

[54]  R. Wyer,et al.  Effects of stereotypes on decision making and information-processing strategies. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[55]  S. Spencer,et al.  The Interference of Stereotype Threat With Women's Generation of Mathematical Problem-Solving Strategies , 2001 .

[56]  F. Aboud Children and prejudice , 1988 .

[57]  When and Why Social Categorization Produces Inequality (and vice versa) , 2007, Human Development.

[58]  Matthew Flatt,et al.  PsyScope: An interactive graphic system for designing and controlling experiments in the psychology laboratory using Macintosh computers , 1993 .

[59]  Eliot R. Smith,et al.  Gender and racial stereotypes in impression formation and social decision-making processes , 1990 .

[60]  G. Āllport The Nature of Prejudice , 1954 .

[61]  D. Gilbert,et al.  The trouble of thinking: Activation and application of stereotypic beliefs. , 1991 .

[62]  C. Macrae,et al.  Stereotype activation and inhibition , 2013 .

[63]  G. Alexander An Evolutionary Perspective of Sex-Typed Toy Preferences: Pink, Blue, and the Brain , 2003, Archives of sexual behavior.

[64]  A. Garnham,et al.  Immediate activation of stereotypical gender information , 2005, Memory & cognition.

[65]  A. Hurlbert,et al.  Biological components of sex differences in color preference , 2007, Current Biology.

[66]  C. Macrae,et al.  Stereotypes and Mental Life: The Case of the Motivated but Thwarted Tactician , 1994 .

[67]  Jasmin Cloutier,et al.  The perceptual determinants of person construal: reopening the social-cognitive toolbox. , 2005, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[68]  A. Eagly,et al.  Stereotypes as Dynamic Constructs: Women and Men of the Past, Present, and Future , 2000 .

[69]  Natalie A. Wyer,et al.  The Roles of Motivation and Ability in Controlling the Consequences of Stereotype Suppression , 2000 .

[70]  Z. Kunda,et al.  When do stereotypes come to mind and when do they color judgment? A goal-based theoretical framework for stereotype activation and application. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.

[71]  Joanne L. Brebner,et al.  Faces, flowers and football boots: Capacity limits in distractor processing , 2008, Cognition.

[72]  D. Pillemer,et al.  Children's sex-related stereotyping of colors. , 1990, Child development.

[73]  S. Kaiser,et al.  The Emergence of Modern Infantwear, 1896-1962: Traditional White Dresses Succumb to Fashion's Gender Obsession , 2001 .

[74]  A. Eagly,et al.  Dynamic Stereotypes about Women and Men in Latin America and the United States , 2005 .

[75]  M. Ryan,et al.  Investigating preschoolers' categorical thinking about gender through imitation, attention, and the use of self-categories. , 2008, Child development.