2021
DOI: 10.1007/s42822-021-00075-x
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The Impact of Career Choice on the Implicit Gender–Career Bias Among Undergraduate Brazilian Students

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The IRAP provides information at the level of each relation targeted in the task and, so, was able to further reveal that participants also appeared to express a weak pro-Women-STEM implicit relation, which was statistically significant only among women studying STEM subjects (Farrell and McHugh 2017;. This finding of a pro-Women-STEM relation among women in STEM was also recently supported by an IRAP study by Moreira et al (2021) with a Brazilian sample. Though there were several procedural differences (e.g., different groupings of comparison subjects and label words), it is interesting to observe the partial support across cultural contexts of these relational patterns.…”
Section: Influencing Arbitrarily Applicable Relational Respondingmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…The IRAP provides information at the level of each relation targeted in the task and, so, was able to further reveal that participants also appeared to express a weak pro-Women-STEM implicit relation, which was statistically significant only among women studying STEM subjects (Farrell and McHugh 2017;. This finding of a pro-Women-STEM relation among women in STEM was also recently supported by an IRAP study by Moreira et al (2021) with a Brazilian sample. Though there were several procedural differences (e.g., different groupings of comparison subjects and label words), it is interesting to observe the partial support across cultural contexts of these relational patterns.…”
Section: Influencing Arbitrarily Applicable Relational Respondingmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…This is the most novel outcome of our research which is in contrast with the literature on implicit gender biases (Moreira et al, 2021;Shin & Seo, 2019) in how organizations construct internal training efforts towards recruitment (Godsil et al, 2016;Women in Employment Committee, 2003) Even in knowing that that this finding should be replicated in future research before being conclusive, it may be worth considering that this new perspective on gender biases may allow organizations to take more active control over how to they engage with potential employees.…”
Section: Career Gender Biases May Not Be As Important In Influencing ...mentioning
confidence: 77%