A comparison of adult males' and females' interactions with girls and boys |
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Authors: | Charles D. Hoffman Sandra Eiko Tsuneyoshi Marilyn Ebina Heather Fite |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, California State University, 92407, San Bernardino, California
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Abstract: | The verbal interactions of adult males and females with trained girl and boy confederates were compared in an unstructured and an immediately following structured situation. Women did not respond differently based on the child's gender in either situation, while men spoke more and used longer mean length of utterances with the boys than with the girls in the unstructured situation. In the structured situation males did not respond differently to girls and boys, speaking more to both than did females. Correlations between the number of words spoken in female-child pairs were higher, suggesting a greater reciprocity of interaction, than for male-child pairs in both situations. The results are seen as reflecting the outcome of differential sex-role socialization for men and women, especially with respect to children, with females socialized to relate with others and men to need to dominate others. |
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