自然语言中的种族-性别交叉定型观念

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Han-Wu-Shuang Bao, Peter Gries
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引用次数: 0

摘要

亚裔和黑人男性和女性是如何被定型的?从性别种族和刻板印象内容角度进行的研究得出的实证结果喜忧参半。我们使用在英语书籍、新闻文章、维基百科、Reddit 和 Twitter 上预先训练的 BERT 模型,并采用一种测量自然语言命题的新方法(填充-掩码关联测试,FMAT),探讨了亚裔和黑人男性和女性刻板印象中的性别(男性气质-女性气质)、体力、温暖和能力等内容。我们发现,与黑人男性相比,亚裔男性(而非女性)被刻板印象为缺乏阳刚之气,道德感/可信度较低。与黑人男性和黑人女性相比,亚裔男性和亚裔女性分别被刻板印象为肌肉发达/运动能力较差、自信/支配欲较弱,但更善于交际/友好、更能干/聪明。这些研究结果表明,自然语言中的亚裔和黑人刻板印象具有多方面的内容和性别细微差别,需要将性别图式理论和刻板印象内容模型结合起来加以平衡。本研究探索了它们在大型语言模型中作为命题的语义表征,揭示了种族-性别交叉刻板印象在现实生活中是如何自然表达的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Intersectional race–gender stereotypes in natural language

Intersectional race–gender stereotypes in natural language

How are Asian and Black men and women stereotyped? Research from the gendered race and stereotype content perspectives has produced mixed empirical findings. Using BERT models pre-trained on English language books, news articles, Wikipedia, Reddit and Twitter, with a new method for measuring propositions in natural language (the Fill-Mask Association Test, FMAT), we explored the gender (masculinity–femininity), physical strength, warmth and competence contents of stereotypes about Asian and Black men and women. We find that Asian men (but not women) are stereotyped as less masculine and less moral/trustworthy than Black men. Compared to Black men and Black women, respectively, both Asian men and Asian women are stereotyped as less muscular/athletic and less assertive/dominant, but more sociable/friendly and more capable/intelligent. These findings suggest that Asian and Black stereotypes in natural language have multifaceted contents and gender nuances, requiring a balanced view integrating the gender schema theory and the stereotype content model. Exploring their semantic representations as propositions in large language models, this research reveals how intersectional race–gender stereotypes are naturally expressed in real life.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
7.40%
发文量
85
期刊介绍: The British Journal of Social Psychology publishes work from scholars based in all parts of the world, and manuscripts that present data on a wide range of populations inside and outside the UK. It publishes original papers in all areas of social psychology including: • social cognition • attitudes • group processes • social influence • intergroup relations • self and identity • nonverbal communication • social psychological aspects of personality, affect and emotion • language and discourse Submissions addressing these topics from a variety of approaches and methods, both quantitative and qualitative are welcomed. We publish papers of the following kinds: • empirical papers that address theoretical issues; • theoretical papers, including analyses of existing social psychological theories and presentations of theoretical innovations, extensions, or integrations; • review papers that provide an evaluation of work within a given area of social psychology and that present proposals for further research in that area; • methodological papers concerning issues that are particularly relevant to a wide range of social psychologists; • an invited agenda article as the first article in the first part of every volume. The editorial team aims to handle papers as efficiently as possible. In 2016, papers were triaged within less than a week, and the average turnaround time from receipt of the manuscript to first decision sent back to the authors was 47 days.
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