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In science, many are blinded by gender stereotype

In science, many are blinded by gender stereotype

Feminine and 鈥榓ttractive鈥 women deemed less likely to be scientists


In her leading role for the 1993 blockbuster science-fiction movie, 鈥淛urassic Park,鈥 actor Laura Dern played a brilliant paleobotanist who looked as you might expect for someone who pokes through steaming piles of dinosaur poop 鈥 hiking boots, khaki shorts, and not particularly concerned about the state of her hair.

Fast forward to a 2015 sequel, 鈥淛urassic World,鈥 in which Bryce Dallas Howard plays the 鈥渟enior assets manager鈥 for the hubris-saturated park where cloned dinosaurs roam, and who spends much of the movie tottering through the jungle in high heels, a white skirt and, somehow, largely unmussed hair.

Sarah Banchefsky

鈥淚 can鈥檛 recommend the latest movie,鈥 says Sarah Banchefsky, a postdoctoral researcher in social psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder. 鈥淚n the first movie, there was a young female computer hacker and an older female scientist, both very talented. Now, the female in charge of the park wears three-inch heels and is ultimately portrayed as incompetent.鈥

That devolution may well reflect a bias revealed in Banchefsky鈥檚 new paper, 鈥淏ut You Don鈥檛 Look Like a Scientist! Women Scientists with Feminine Appearance are Deemed Less Likely to be Scientists,鈥 published in February in the journal Sex Roles and co-written with Jacob Westfall of the University of Texas at Austin department of psychology, and Bernadette Park and Charles M. Judd of CU-Boulder鈥檚 department of psychology and neuroscience.

鈥淲e knew there were accounts out there in the literature for decades that women (scientists) can鈥檛 wear skirts if they want to be taken seriously. They are seen as 鈥榯oo feminine,鈥欌 Banchefsky says. 鈥淥ne paper shows that about 75 percent of male and female engineering students believe the perception that scientists cannot be feminine is a problem for female engineers.鈥

Finding a dearth of rigorous research into such biases, the researchers designed two studies to examine 鈥渨hether subtle variations in feminine appearance erroneously convey a woman鈥檚 likelihood of being a scientist.鈥

The social media hashtag called attention to stereotypes in the enginieering industry and was the impetus for the CU experiments. Pictured is Isis Wenger, whose photo was featured in her tech firm鈥檚 ad to recruit more engineers. Because she was deemed 鈥渢oo attractive鈥 to be a 鈥渞eal engineer,鈥 some who saw the ad doubted its veracity.

The social media hashtag #ilooklikeanengineer campaign called attention to stereotypes in the enginieering industry and was the impetus for the CU experiments. Pictured is Isis Wenger, whose photo was featured in her tech firm鈥檚 ad to recruit more engineers. Because she was deemed 鈥渢oo attractive鈥 to be a 鈥渞eal engineer,鈥 some who saw the ad doubted its veracity.

The first asked participants to rate 80 photos of tenured or tenure-track men and women in science, technology, engineering and math fields at top research universities on a scale of masculine to feminine. Participants were not told anything about the people in the photos, all of who are top scientists at U.S. research universities.

The researchers controlled for such factors as age and also asked participants to say how likely subjects were to be early-childhood educators, a field dominated by women.

鈥淲hat we find is that for men, there is no impact of gendered appearance,鈥 Banchefsky says.

But for women, the more 鈥渇eminine鈥 a target鈥檚 appearance, the less likely participants identified her as a scientist. The more feminine a photo was deemed to be, the more likely participants were to believe that the targets were teachers.

The second study sought to winnow out potential distorting factors by presenting the photos of participants grouped by gender to one group, and photos sorted randomly to another. They were asked only to judge career-likelihood, without being asked to evaluate masculine or feminine appearance. The study also added journalism, a relatively gender-neutral field, to lessen impressions of bipolarity in stereotypically male and female careers (science and elementary education).

The message that your appearance matters and that it is relevant to your career choice likely leads other women 鈥 as undergraduates, as high-school students, and even as young girls 鈥 to conclude they just don鈥檛 fit with science.鈥

Likewise, the second study 鈥渟howed that for female scientists, but not male scientists, perceivers used gendered appearance as a cue about how likely they were to be scientists.鈥

The research confirms the all-too-real experiences of many women in STEM fields. The paper opens with the story of Isis Wenger, whose photo was featured in her tech firm鈥檚 ad to recruit more engineers. Because she was deemed 鈥渢oo attractive鈥 to be a 鈥渞eal engineer,鈥 some who saw the ad doubted its veracity.

Some 鈥済olden age鈥 science fiction novels of the 鈥40s and 鈥50s 鈥渄aringly鈥 put females in scientific roles, only to portray them as cold, sexless and plain, or unattractive 鈥 Isaac Asimov鈥檚 Susan Calvin, founder of U.S. Robotics and Mechanical Men, is a classic example.

Listen to researcher Sarah Banchefsky discuss her results

鈥淭here are some accounts of women in STEM fields who not only feel like they can鈥檛 wear makeup or a dress, but also can鈥檛 talk about wanting to have kids,鈥 Banchefsky says.

She says she hopes to expand the work in the future to examine racial biases (to streamline the studies, only photos of white scientists were used), biases against 鈥渇eminine鈥 scientists in the field and lab and identifying what factors participants deemed 鈥渁ttractive鈥 or feminine.

Park, professor of social psychology and neuroscience, says the study has troubling implications for the future of science in America.

鈥淭hese feminine looking women have 鈥榟eard鈥 verbally or nonverbally that they don鈥檛 look like scientists, that they don鈥檛 belong in these male-dominated, highly prestigious fields,鈥 she says. 鈥(T)he message that your appearance matters and that it is relevant to your career choice likely leads other women 鈥 as undergraduates, as high-school students, and even as young girls 鈥 to conclude they just don鈥檛 fit with science.鈥

Clay Evans is a free-lance writer in Boulder.