是什么决定了归属感和专业感?心理学与哲学比较中的隔离因素

Heather M. Maranges , Maxine Iannuccilli , Katharina Nieswandt , Ulf Hlobil , Kristen A. Dunfield
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引用次数: 0

摘要

归属感是人们选择职业时不可或缺的一部分。从学术培训开始,女性和男性在各行各业的比例都不成比例。目前的研究集中在两个领域,这两个领域在历史和主题上都很相似,但却以相反的性别差距为特征——心理学(女性多于男性)和哲学(男性多于女性)——来调查对学术性别差距的理论解释是如何影响归属感的。具体来说,我们同时模拟了理论相关的个体差异(共情、系统化和智力竞争)以及生活目标(家庭、金钱和地位的优先次序)对归属感和心理学或哲学专业的相对贡献。我们发现男性比女性表现出更高的智力好斗性,而智力好斗性预示着归属感和主修哲学而非心理学。虽然系统化和共情是归属的预测因素,反过来,心理学和哲学专业分别是,当考虑到其他因素时,女性和男性在共情和系统化方面没有差异。与男性相比,女性在选择职业时更看重家庭、财富和地位。与之前的理论相反,这些因素直接或间接地影响了她们的归属感和主修心理学。综上所述,这些发现表明,学生们对自己好斗性的认知,以及他们对金钱和地位的渴望程度,在女性的心理学归属感和男性的哲学归属感中起着至关重要的作用。
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What determines feelings of belonging and majoring in an academic field? Isolating factors by comparing psychology and philosophy

Feelings of belonging are integral in people's choice of what career to pursue. Women and men are disproportionately represented across careers, starting with academic training. The present research focuses on two fields that are similar in their history and subject matter but feature inverse gender gaps—psychology (more women than men) and philosophy (more men than women)—to investigate how theorized explanations for academic gender gaps contribute to feelings of belonging. Specifically, we simultaneously model the relative contribution of theoretically relevant individual differences (empathizing, systematizing, and intellectual combativeness) as well as life goals (prioritization of family, money, and status) to feelings of belonging and majoring in psychology or philosophy. We find that men report higher intellectual combativeness than women, and intellectual combativeness predicts feelings of belonging and majoring in philosophy over psychology. Although systematizing and empathizing are predictive of belonging and, in turn, majoring in psychology and philosophy, respectively, when other factors are taken into account, women and men do not differ in empathizing and systematizing. Women, more than men, report prioritizing having a family, wealth, and status in choosing a career, and these directly or indirectly feed into feelings of belonging and majoring in psychology, in contrast to prior theory. Together, these findings suggest that students’ perceptions of their own combativeness and the extent to which they desire money and status play essential roles in women's feeling they belong in psychology and men's feeling they belong in philosophy.

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Current research in behavioral sciences
Current research in behavioral sciences Behavioral Neuroscience
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
40 days
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