Anxiety, gender, and impression formation

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Algoma University Archives > Algoma University Theses collection > Psychology series > Anxiety, gender, and impression formation
Creator
Sabrina R Knight
Date
2008
Physical Description
154.86 KB of textual records (PDF)
General Material Designation
Electronic record, Textual record
Language(s)
English
Bibliographic Information
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.:, OSTMA-PSYC-Knight-Sabrina-R-20080407
Descriptive Notes
Audience: Undergraduate. -- Dissertation: Thesis (B. A.). -- Algoma University, 2008. -- Submitted in partial fulfillment of course requirements for PSYC 4105. -- Includes figures, scenarios, and question sets.
A great deal of research on impression formation has revealed that a multitude of factors influence impression formation, and that anxiety has a negative influence on these impressions. Yet despite a wide body of research it remains unclear how gender perceptions of anxiety, and the stereotypes associated with anxiety, impact the impressions formed of anxious individuals. In order to investigate this further, it has been hypothesized that males and females will: (a) view a non-anxious gender-neutral target as a member of the same gender, and (b) view an anxious gender-neutral target as a member of the opposite gender. In a study examining these effects, 80 participants (40 males and 40 females), were presented with a scenario of a gender-neutral anxious or non-anxious target and then asked to evaluate, and allocate a gender to the individual presented. The following study will further examine these hypotheses, with an in-depth assessment of the results and their implications.