Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jan, 2015 09:21 AM
    A new research has found that men are less likely to agree with scientific evidence of gender bias in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines than women.
     
    Previous research had revealed that gender biases limit the opportunities for women within STEM disciplines.
     
    "It is critical to understand how people react to evidence of bias in order to implement successful interventions designed to decrease it, particularly given mounting evidence that non-stigmatised group members (white men) may respond differently than other individuals," the authors noted.
     
    For the study, researchers Corinne Moss-Racusin, Aneta Molenda and Charlotte Cramer analysed 831 public comments made on three online news articles from the New York Times, Discover Magazine Blog and the IFL Science blog.
     
    They found that men were more likely to respond negatively to these articles than women.
     
    "Only 9.5 percent of the comments argued that sexism does not exist and 68 percent of these commenters were men," the authors said.
     
    While 67.4 percent of the comments agreed that gender bias exists, of these 29 percent were men.
     
    The findings showed that 22 percent of all of the comments justified the existence of gender bias. Of these comments, between 79 percent and 88 percent were made by men.
     
    It also found that 59.8 percent justified gender bias using biological explanations, 29.6 percent used non-biological explanations and 10.6 percent justified gender bias, stating that women perpetrate it by discriminating against other women.
     
    Almost 100 percent of the comments expressing gratitude for the study were made by women.
     
    The researchers also studied sexist remarks made by men and women in the comments.
     
    "Seven percent of all of the comments included sexist remarks. Of these, 76.8 percent were against women and 23.2 percent were against men," they found.
     
    Of the sexist remarks made against women, 95 percent were made by men, concluded the study that appeared in the journal Psychology of Women Quarterly.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    'FUNtervals' improve behaviour of kids

    'FUNtervals' improve behaviour of kids
    Four minutes of physical activity could improve behaviour in the classroom for primary school students, showed a research....

    'FUNtervals' improve behaviour of kids

    Did You Remember To Set Your Clocks Back An Hour? If You Did, You Got An Extra Hour Of Sleep

    Did You Remember To Set Your Clocks Back An Hour? If You Did, You Got An Extra Hour Of Sleep
    WASHINGTON — Most people in the United States and Canada are getting an extra hour of sleep this weekend, thanks to the annual shift back to standard time.

    Did You Remember To Set Your Clocks Back An Hour? If You Did, You Got An Extra Hour Of Sleep

    How you can make others behave in a group

    How you can make others behave in a group
    In group activities where some members tend to behave egoistically, it is possible for even one person to exert influence on others...

    How you can make others behave in a group

    Feeling of sadness lingers on longer

    Feeling of sadness lingers on longer
    "You need more time to mull over and cope with what happened to fully comprehend it," said lead authors Philippe Verduyn and...

    Feeling of sadness lingers on longer

    Reading bedtime stories won't make your kids smarter

    Reading bedtime stories won't make your kids smarter
    Reading bedtime stories is a positive way to interact with your kids, but it would not influence children's intelligence later in life, said a research....

    Reading bedtime stories won't make your kids smarter

    BDSM Not Abuse But Way To Spice Up Sex Life In Safe, Consensual Way

    BDSM Not Abuse But Way To Spice Up Sex Life In Safe, Consensual Way
    Fired CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi's admission that he engages in rough sex has Canadians hearing a term that many may be unfamiliar with — BDSM, or bondage, dominance, sadism and masochism.

    BDSM Not Abuse But Way To Spice Up Sex Life In Safe, Consensual Way