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2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2004.02.003
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Seeing is believing: Exposure to counterstereotypic women leaders and its effect on the malleability of automatic gender stereotyping

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citations
Cited by 597 publications
(548 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…Past research using the model found that contact with female experts in STEM (e.g., professors) enhanced female students' liking for STEM fields, identification with these fields, confidence, and career aspirations in STEM (10). These findings are consistent with other data showing that individuals' aspirations are positively influenced after seeing successful professional role models, especially if they relate to these role models (16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21). Collectively, past work demonstrates that exposure to same-sex experts who are at an advanced career stage enhances young women's global attitudes toward the field and career aspirations.…”
supporting
confidence: 77%
“…Past research using the model found that contact with female experts in STEM (e.g., professors) enhanced female students' liking for STEM fields, identification with these fields, confidence, and career aspirations in STEM (10). These findings are consistent with other data showing that individuals' aspirations are positively influenced after seeing successful professional role models, especially if they relate to these role models (16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21). Collectively, past work demonstrates that exposure to same-sex experts who are at an advanced career stage enhances young women's global attitudes toward the field and career aspirations.…”
supporting
confidence: 77%
“…Therefore, according to Social Role Theory, this change in social roles could produce a change in gender stereotypes (view Eagly, 1987). These changes have been reported in many studies (e.g., Dasgupta & Asgari, 2004;Lenton, Bruder, & Sedikides, 2009). …”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…One approach to context-shifting is to elaborate on the counterstereotypical associations of positive exemplars of disliked groups and negative exemplars of liked groups (Dasgupta & Asgari, 2004;Dasgupta & Greenwald, 2001;Dasgupta & Rivera, 2008;Gonsalkorale, Allen, Sherman, & Klauer, 2010). For example, Dasgupta and Greenwald (2001;see also Joy-Gaba & Nosek, 2010) demonstrated that exposing participants to images of admired Black exemplars and disliked White exemplars reduced implicit prejudice.…”
Section: Shifting the Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While most research on clarifying the mechanisms of changing implicit prejudice is laboratory based, several examples demonstrate that implicit prejudice can be reduced in naturalistic environments (e.g., Dasgupta & Asgari, 2004;O'Brien, Puhl, Latner, Mir, & Hunter, 2010;Rudman, Ashmore, & Gary, 2001;Shook & Fazio, 2008;Stout, Dasgupta, Hunsinger, & MacManus, 2011). A notable example examining implicit stereotypes, the twin sibling of implicit prejudice, took advantage of a natural experiment in Indian politics (Beaman, Chattopadhyay, Duflo, Pande, & Topalova, 2008).…”
Section: What Is Effective?mentioning
confidence: 99%