Jenna Alton
@JennaAlton
Followers
38
Following
16
Media
2
Statuses
7
PhD Student Studying Social Cognitive Development @UofMaryland
Joined August 2022
Many of these patterns got stronger with age, likely due to children’s understanding of the larger societal context of gender. E.g., boys face stricter sanctions for gender non-conformity in appearance, making the stereotypicality of their appearance a very informative cue. 6/6
1
0
0
…. children weighed appearances more when: (1) reasoning about characters labeled “boys” (2) making inferences about feminine attributes (e.g., playing with dolls) (3) they themselves were boys 5/6
1
0
0
Children generally integrated both labels and appearances into their inferences but weighed appearances more when: … 4/6
1
0
0
Children picked who among 4 characters shows a certain masculine or feminine attribute *the most*. Once they did, we removed their choice from the screen and asked again. We obtained a ranking of the 4 characters from most likely to least likely to exhibit the attribute. 3/6
1
0
0
We explored the relative weight that 4- to 12-year-old children assign to two gender-related cues in their inferences about others: gender labels (“girl,” “boy”) and gendered appearances (feminine, masculine). 2/6
1
0
0
In a second, we form expectations about the likely traits and behaviors of people we meet. How does this ability develop? How do others’ perceived gender factor into it? A new paper is in press at Cognition with @andreicimpian and @lucaspbutler: https://t.co/3atnHvbEJ0 1/6
drive.google.com
1
2
6
🥳 Reminder: our SRCD symposium is this Thursday at 11:45am, Floor 1, Grand Ballroom I! Come learn how infants and children infer what others know, and reason about the sources that surround them! With @fransiscating, @RambleCamble, @JennaAlton & @lucaspbutler!
1
7
27