公主有力量吗?儿童对公主和自我认知的准实验研究。

IF 1.7 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY Journal of Genetic Psychology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1080/00221325.2022.2124904
Lisa M Dinella, Jordan A Levinson, Maryam A Srouji
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引用次数: 0

摘要

儿童的性别图式认知引导着他们的注意力、亲和力和行为,往往缩小了他们的机会。本研究的目的是检验儿童接触迪士尼动画公主的代理行为(如成为领导者)如何改变儿童对公主特征的性别图式感知,以及这种接触是否影响儿童对自己性别类型特质的感知。在六周的开始和结束时,对来自美国东北部地区的60名儿童(年龄为4.5岁)的采访表明,正如假设的那样,儿童对公主和他们自己的看法在积累了描绘公主模仿代理行为的动画视频后变得不那么性别图式了。在整个研究过程中,孩子们对公主角色和自己角色的看法有所增加,他们声称,随着接触非传统的性别角色,孩子们开始认为自己的性别特征不那么明显。这些发现为儿童早期媒体接触在塑造儿童性别认知中的作用提供了新的见解。
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Can Princesses Be Powerful? A Quasi-Experimental Study Examining Children's Perceptions of Princesses and the Self.

Children's gender schematic cognitions guide their attention, affinities, and behaviors, often narrowing their opportunities. The goal of the present study is to examine how children's exposure to animated Disney princesses modeling agentic behaviors (such as being a leader) alters children's gender schematic perceptions of princesses' characteristics, and if this exposure impacts children's perceptions of their own gender-typed qualities. Interviews with 60 children from the northeast region of the United States (Mage = 4.5 years old) at the beginning and end of six weeks indicate that, as hypothesized, children's perceptions of princesses and themselves became less gender schematic after cumulative exposure to animated videos depicting princesses modeling agentic behaviors. Children's perceptions of princesses' agency and their own agency increased throughout the study, asserting that with exposure to nontraditional gender-typed characters, children begin to see themselves as less gender-typed. These findings provide new insights into the role of early children's media exposure in shaping children's gender cognitions.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Genetic Psychology is devoted to research and theory in the field of developmental psychology. It encompasses a life-span approach, so in addition to manuscripts devoted to infancy, childhood, and adolescence, articles on adulthood and aging are also published. We accept submissions in the area of educational psychology as long as they are developmental in nature. Submissions in cross cultural psychology are accepted, but they must add to our understanding of human development in a comparative global context. Applied, descriptive, and qualitative articles are occasionally accepted, as are replications and refinements submitted as brief reports. The review process for all submissions to The Journal of Genetic Psychology consists of double blind review.
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