When Majority Men Respect Minority Women, Groups Communicate Better: A Neurological Exploration

IF 3 3区 心理学 Q2 MANAGEMENT
R. Amey, Kyle J. Emich, Chad E. Forbes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Groups must leverage their members’ diverse knowledge to make optimal decisions. However, the gender composition of a group may affect this ability, particularly because solo status female members (one female grouped with males) are generally allocated lower status than their male counterparts, so their knowledge is more likely to be ignored. Whereas most previous work suggests ways solo status women can increase their status; instead, we propose that groups communicate better when men give their female teammate appropriate respect. We examine this in mixed-gender groups working on a hidden profile task while wearing wireless EEGs to measure live neural activity. We find that groups who solve the problem correctly are more likely to contain majority male members with more approach-oriented mindsets, operationalized as neural alpha asymmetry, as they respect their female teammate more. Thus, we provide evidence that neural activity is partially responsible for whether mixed-gender groups make optimal decisions.
当多数男性尊重少数女性时,群体沟通会更好:一项神经学探索
团队必须利用其成员的多样化知识来做出最佳决策。然而,一个群体的性别构成可能会影响这种能力,特别是因为单身女性成员(一名女性与男性分组)的地位通常低于男性成员,因此她们的知识更容易被忽视。而之前的大多数研究都提出了单身女性可以提高地位的方法;相反,我们建议,当男性给予女性队友适当的尊重时,团队会更好地沟通。我们在穿着无线脑电图测量实时神经活动的同时,在从事隐藏档案任务的混合性别群体中对此进行了研究。我们发现,正确解决问题的群体更有可能包含大多数男性成员,他们的心态更倾向于方法,表现为神经阿尔法不对称,因为他们更尊重女性队友。因此,我们提供的证据表明,神经活动对混合性别群体是否做出最佳决策负有部分责任。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.40%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Policy: Small Group Research is an international and interdisciplinary journal presenting research, theoretical advancements, and empirically supported applications with respect to all types of small groups. Through advancing the systematic study of small groups, this journal seeks to increase communication among all who are professionally interested in group phenomena.
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