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      How Gender and Race Stereotypes Impact the Advancement of Scholars in STEM: Professors’ Biased Evaluations of Physics and Biology Post-Doctoral Candidates

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          Stereotype Threat and Women's Math Performance

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            An ambivalent alliance: Hostile and benevolent sexism as complementary justifications for gender inequality.

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              A model of (often mixed) stereotype content: competence and warmth respectively follow from perceived status and competition.

              Stereotype research emphasizes systematic processes over seemingly arbitrary contents, but content also may prove systematic. On the basis of stereotypes' intergroup functions, the stereotype content model hypothesizes that (a) 2 primary dimensions are competence and warmth, (b) frequent mixed clusters combine high warmth with low competence (paternalistic) or high competence with low warmth (envious), and (c) distinct emotions (pity, envy, admiration, contempt) differentiate the 4 competence-warmth combinations. Stereotypically, (d) status predicts high competence, and competition predicts low warmth. Nine varied samples rated gender, ethnicity, race, class, age, and disability out-groups. Contrary to antipathy models, 2 dimensions mattered, and many stereotypes were mixed, either pitying (low competence, high warmth subordinates) or envying (high competence, low warmth competitors). Stereotypically, status predicted competence, and competition predicted low warmth.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sex Roles
                Sex Roles
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0360-0025
                1573-2762
                June 3 2019
                Article
                10.1007/s11199-019-01052-w
                9812088f-508d-4e4c-8d6a-7042c33c6d79
                © 2019

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                History

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