(缓和)团队中性别刻板印象的自我实现:能力归因、行为优势、个人绩效和多样性信念的相互作用。

The Journal of applied psychology Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Epub Date: 2022-01-06 DOI:10.1037/apl0000995
Bertolt Meyer, Hans van Dijk, Marloes van Engen
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引用次数: 3

摘要

我们对团队多样性文献中的社会分类观点提出了挑战,认为刻板印象和对同一社会类别成员的不偏爱支配着性别多样化团队的过程和动态。我们假设团队成员的性别和任务刻板印象会产生能力归因,并以自我实现的方式塑造团队成员的支配行为和表现:被认为能力较强的团队成员表现得更具支配性,并且比那些被认为能力较弱的团队成员表现得更好。我们进一步认为,支持多样性的信念可能通过抑制个体的刻板印象确认行为来防止刻板印象的自我实现倾向。研究人员用97个性别不同的四人学生小组来测试假设,这些小组研究的是典型的男性或女性问题。团队成员在合作之前会评估彼此的能力。多样性信念被操纵为支持多样性或支持相似性,并通过行为编码观察到优势。多层次路径模型表明,能力归因介导了亲相似性信念下刻板印象的性别任务契合对个体优势行为和绩效的影响,而在亲多样性信念下没有作用。因此,我们的研究表明,团队中性别刻板印象的自我实现倾向可以通过建立支持多样性的信念来缓解。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
(Mitigating) the self-fulfillment of gender stereotypes in teams: The interplay of competence attributions, behavioral dominance, individual performance, and diversity beliefs.

We challenge the social categorization perspective in the team diversity literature by arguing that stereotypes and not favoritism for members of the same social category govern processes and dynamics in gender-diverse teams. We posit that team members' gender and task stereotypes generate competence attributions that shape individual team members' dominance behavior and performance in a self-fulfilling way: Team members who are attributed more competence behave more dominantly and outperform those who are attributed less competence. We further argue that pro-diversity beliefs may prevent this self-fulfilling tendency of stereotypes by inhibiting individuals' stereotype-confirming behavior. Hypotheses were tested with 97 gender-heterogeneous four-person student teams working on stereotypically masculine- or feminine-typed problems. Team members estimated each other's competence prior to collaboration. Diversity beliefs were manipulated to be either pro-diversity or pro-similarity and dominance was observed with behavioral coding. Multilevel path modeling showed that competence attributions mediated the effects of stereotypical gender-task fit on individual dominance behavior and performance under pro-similarity beliefs but not under pro-diversity beliefs. Our study thus shows that the self-fulfilling tendencies of gender stereotypes in teams can be mitigated by instituting pro-diversity beliefs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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