Biased inferences about gender from names

Bethany Gardner, Sarah Brown-Schmidt
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Abstract

How do alternative forms of reference to individuals—first, last, and full names—guide inferences about the gender of the referent? Given distributional correspondences between English first names and gender, first names provide probabilistic information about an individual's gender. While English last names do not vary with gender, men are more likely to be referred to by last name alone. Across four experiments, we demonstrate that inferences about gender are shaped by a persistent bias to infer that people are male, along with probabilistic information carried by the first name. When an individual was introduced by last name alone, participants overwhelmingly used he to subsequently refer to the person, suggesting that participants inferred that the person was male. This bias was still present when the individual was introduced using a first or full name, with participants less likely to use she than the distributional characteristics of the first names would predict. When explicitly asked to recall an individual’s gender who was introduced by last name alone, participants preferentially responded that the person was male. This bias persisted even when the person was introduced using a first or full name. Repeated reference attenuated, but did not eliminate, this bias. We discuss implications for models of how world knowledge is linked to language use.
从名字推断性别有偏差
个人的其他指称形式--名、姓和全名--如何引导对指称者性别的推断?鉴于英文名与性别之间的分布对应关系,名字提供了有关个人性别的概率信息。虽然英文姓氏并不随性别而变化,但男性更有可能仅通过姓氏被提及。通过四项实验,我们证明了对性别的推断是由推断某人是男性的持续偏差以及名字所包含的概率信息所决定的。当只用姓氏来介绍一个人时,绝大多数参与者随后都用 "他 "来指代这个人,这表明参与者推断这个人是男性。当使用姓氏或全名介绍某人时,这种偏差仍然存在,参与者使用 "她 "的可能性比使用姓氏的分布特征所预测的要低。当被试者被明确要求回忆一个只用姓氏介绍的人的性别时,被试者更倾向于回答该人是男性。即使在介绍某人时使用的是姓氏或全名,这种偏差仍然存在。重复提及会减轻但不会消除这种偏差。我们讨论了世界知识如何与语言使用相联系的模型的意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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