Publication | Closed Access
Are Women Always More Interpersonally Sensitive Than Men? Impact of Goals and Content Domain
130
Citations
49
References
2007
Year
Gendered PerceptionSocial PsychologyIndividual DifferencesSocial InfluenceSocial SciencesPsychologyDomain SpecificityGender IdentityGender StudiesSex DifferencesContent DomainBehavioral SciencesGendered ContextApplied Social PsychologyGender StereotypeInterpersonal CommunicationGender DevelopmentInterpersonal RelationshipsGender Divide
Two studies examined motivation and content domain as possible influences on sex differences in interpersonal sensitivity. Although much research has found women to excel on tasks measuring interpersonal sensitivity, most of the tasks have measured accuracy in female-relevant domains such as emotion. The present studies measured interpersonal sensitivity, defined as accurate recall of another person, for both female-relevant and male-relevant content domains and also included motivational manipulations intended to influence men and women differently. Study 1 measured accuracy of recalling information in a written vignette about a person, and Study 2 measured accuracy of recalling details about an interaction partner. Both studies supported hypotheses about domain specificity and gender-relevant motivation. However, even for male-stereotypic content and for tasks framed to favor men's motivation to perform well, men's accuracy never exceeded women's.
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