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Biological Influences on Gender Typing

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... attractiveness to girls (e.g., dolls, tea sets, jewelry, jump ropes) ... Less likely to give 'girl toys' (e.g., dolls) to sons. Pasterski et al. (2005) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biological Influences on Gender Typing


1
  • Biological Influences on Gender Typing
  • (Hormonal Influences)
  • Experimental animal studies indicate that
    exposure to androgens (male sex hormones)
  • Increases active play in male and female mammals
  • Promotes male-typical sexual behavior and
    aggression and suppresses maternal caregiving
    behavior in a wide variety of species

2
  • Humans
  • Cannot do experimental research for ethical
    reasons
  • Correlational research

3
  • In boys, naturally occurring variations in
    androgen levels are positively correlated with
  • Amount of rough-and-tumble play
  • Levels of physical aggression

4
  • Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH)
  • Disorder in which child is exposed to high levels
    of androgens from the prenatal period onward
  • Compared to girls without CAH, girls with CAH
    show
  • Higher activity levels
  • Greater interest in male-typical toys,
    activities, and occupations
  • Better spatial/mathematical abilities

5
  • Environmental Influences on Gender Typing
  • Social Learning Theory
  • Gender typing results from
  • imitation of same-sex models and reinforcement
    for this behavior

6
  • Parental Beliefs
  • Describe achievement, competition, and control of
    emotion as important for sons
  • Describe warmth, ladylike behavior, and closely
    supervised activities as important for daughters

7
  • Parental Behavior
  • On average, differences in parental treatment of
    boys and girls are not large
  • Does not mean that parental behavior is
    unimportant because
  • Younger children receive more direct training in
    gender roles than older children
  • Some parents probably practice differential
    treatment more intensely than others

8
  • Parents create different environments for boys
    and girls beginning in infancy (e.g., bedrooms,
    toys)

9
  • Parents give toys that stress action and
    competition to boys (e.g., guns, cars, tools,
    footballs)
  • Give toys that emphasize nurturance, cooperation,
    and physical attractiveness to girls (e.g.,
    dolls, tea sets, jewelry, jump ropes)

10
  • Parents reinforce independence in boys
  • React more positively when boys demand attention,
    run and climb, or try to take toys from others
  • Parents reinforce closeness/dependency in girls
  • More likely to direct play activities, provide
    help, encourage participation in household tasks,
    and refer to emotions

11
  • Fathers tend to treat boys and girls more
    differently than do mothers
  • Engage in more physically stimulating play with
    infant sons than daughters
  • Less likely to give girl toys (e.g., dolls) to
    sons

12
  • Pasterski et al. (2005)
  • Comparison of toy choices in girls and boys with
    CAH and their siblings (without CAH)
  • Girls with CAH played with boys toys more and
    girls toys less than their unaffected sisters
  • No differences between boys with CAH and their
    unaffected brothers

13
  • Parental Behavior
  • Parents gave more negative responses to their
    unaffected sons than to their unaffected
    daughters for play with girls toys
  • Parents gave more positive responses to daughters
    with CAH than to unaffected daughters for play
    with girls toys

14
  • Parental Behavior and Childrens Toy Choices
  • For unaffected children, parents positive and
    negative responses to childrens toy choices were
    related to childrens play behavior
  • Positive responses to childrens play with
    certain toys related to more play with those toys
    (and vice versa for negative responses)
  • For children with CAH, parental behavior was not
    related to childrens toy choices
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