Girls’ stuff, boys’ stuff and mental rotation: fourth graders rotate faster with gender-congruent stimuli
Journal of Cognitive Psychology. Bd. 31. H. 2. Abingdon: Taylor & Francis 2019 S. 225 - 239
Erscheinungsjahr: 2019
ISBN/ISSN: 2044-592X
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Sprache: Englisch
Doi/URN: 10.1080/20445911.2019.1567518
Geprüft | Bibliothek |
Inhaltszusammenfassung
Males outperform females in mental-rotation for various reasons, e.g. stimuli characteristics. This study tested the hypothesis that girls and boys solve mental-rotation tests with female- or respectively male-stereotyped objects faster and more correctly. 116 fourth-graders solved a chronometric mental-rotation test with either female- or male-stereotyped action-based objects as stimulus material and reported their solution strategies and familiarity with handling the objects in real life. B...Males outperform females in mental-rotation for various reasons, e.g. stimuli characteristics. This study tested the hypothesis that girls and boys solve mental-rotation tests with female- or respectively male-stereotyped objects faster and more correctly. 116 fourth-graders solved a chronometric mental-rotation test with either female- or male-stereotyped action-based objects as stimulus material and reported their solution strategies and familiarity with handling the objects in real life. Boys reacted faster than girls only in the male-stimuli condition, while gender differences were inversed in the female-stimuli condition. All children were faster with gender-congruent material, probably provoked by gender-schematic processing or stereotype lift effects. Furthermore, analytic solving strategies appeared as efficient as holistic strategies in gender-congruent conditions, while holistic strategies were more advantageous only in gender-incongruent conditions. The congruence of stimulus material and gender best predicted children’s reaction time. Practical implications are considered regarding the importance of diverse and gender-equalised material to assess mental-rotation skills.» weiterlesen» einklappen
Klassifikation
DFG Fachgebiet:
Psychologie
DDC Sachgruppe:
Psychologie
Verknüpfte Personen
- Claudia Quaiser-Pohl
- Mitarbeiter/in
(Institut für Psychologie)
- Martina Rahe
- Mitarbeiter/in
(Universität Koblenz)
- Linda Schürmann
- Mitarbeiter/in
(Universität Koblenz)
- Vera Ruthsatz
- Mitarbeiter/in
(Institut für Psychologie)