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AuthorMegreya, Ahmed M.
Available date2024-07-16T06:15:13Z
Publication Date2015
Publication NameActa Psychologica
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2015.03.009
ISSN16918
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/56691
AbstractFaces convey a wealth of cues that influence social categorizations and subsequent cognition and behavior. This study examined the effects of wearing a headscarf on face categorization by gender using Egyptian observers who have an extensive exposure with headscarf-framed female faces. A typical headscarf (worn by females) enhanced perceived femininity whereas an atypical headscarf (worn by males) reduced perceived masculinity. Regardless of whether the faces were presented briefly, or until participants responded, the typical headscarf had no effect on categorizing female faces but the atypical headscarf greatly slowed down categorizing male faces. However, a typical headscarf advantage was noticed when the atypical headscarf condition was removed. In addition, both typical and atypical headscarf effects were greatly strengthened when faces were presented as negatives. These data provide support to the dynamic continuity account of social categorization that suggests a competition among multiple simultaneous representations until a construal is stabilized.
Languageen
PublisherElsevier
SubjectFace categorization by gender
Femininity
Gender-cuing information
Masculinity
Social categorization
The headscarf effect
TitleThe effects of a culturally gender-specifying peripheral cue (headscarf) on the categorization of faces by gender
TypeArticle
Pagination19-25
Volume Number158
dc.accessType Abstract Only


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