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April 12, 2025

New research shows evidence of children's gender biases reflected in their facial emotional expressions

Credit: Naomi Shi from Pexels
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Credit: Naomi Shi from Pexels

New research recently published in suggests children's gender biases can be reflected in their facial emotional expressions.

Psychology professor Doug VanderLaan and his colleagues at the University of Toronto Mississauga, studied 296 children (148 boys and 148 girls) in Canada between the ages of four and nine years old while Wang Ivy Wong, Karen Kwan and their colleagues at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and The Hong Kong Polytechnic University studied 309 children (155 boys and 154 girls) in Hong Kong. All children watched four short stories that included five illustrations with pre-recorded audio narratives. The stories were presented in random order and showed peers who were in the same grade as the participant and displayed behaviors that either did or did not follow . While viewing the stories, FaceReader software was used to code the intensities of participants' emotions, including angry, disgusted, happy, sad, scared, and surprised.

The study found a small effect for one (fear), but little to no difference in emotion with the other five. Participants displayed more scared emotion when viewing a boy who wasn't following societal gender stereotypes in the types of toys, activities, clothes, hairstyles, and friends he preferred. This fear was correlated with one of five verbal questions, in particular a question related to emotion perception, where children shared that they perceived the feminine-behaving boy as being less happy when compared with the boy who conformed with masculine gender stereotypes.

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"These results provide evidence that children's gender biases are reflected in their facial emotional expressions—specifically showing signs of being scared when it comes to boy peers whose behaviors don't follow gender stereotypes," said Doug VanderLaan, an associate professor with the Department of Psychology at the University of Toronto Mississauga. "Developmentally, children may learn to imitate such responses from those who are around them like their peers, family members, and media."

VanderLaan noted the finding is consistent with other studies highlighting that less positive characteristics are assigned to children whose behaviors don't follow gender stereotypes, especially when it comes to feminine-behaving . However, for this study in particular, examining facial emotional expressions provided unique insights into the emotional component of peer appraisals. Overall, the research contributes toward more complete understanding when it comes to 's gender biases while assessing their peers.

More information: Karen Man Wa Kwan et al, Children's Facial Emotional Expressions to Gender-Nonconforming Hypothetical Peers, Archives of Sexual Behavior (2025).

Journal information: Archives of Sexual Behavior

Provided by University of Toronto

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Research indicates that children's gender biases are reflected in their facial emotional expressions, particularly showing fear when observing boys who do not conform to gender stereotypes. This fear correlates with perceptions of these boys as less happy. The study highlights that children may learn such responses from their environment, contributing to a broader understanding of how gender biases manifest in emotional appraisals among peers.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.