No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News: Equally Competent and Persuasive

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News : Equally Competent and Persuasive. / Greve-Poulsen, Katrine; Larsen, Frederik Kristoffer Kjøller; Pedersen, Rasmus T.; Albæk, Erik.

I: The International Journal of Press/Politics, Bind 28, Nr. 1, 2022, s. 116-137.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Greve-Poulsen, K, Larsen, FKK, Pedersen, RT & Albæk, E 2022, 'No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News: Equally Competent and Persuasive', The International Journal of Press/Politics, bind 28, nr. 1, s. 116-137. https://doi.org/10.1177/19401612211025499

APA

Greve-Poulsen, K., Larsen, F. K. K., Pedersen, R. T., & Albæk, E. (2022). No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News: Equally Competent and Persuasive. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 28(1), 116-137. https://doi.org/10.1177/19401612211025499

Vancouver

Greve-Poulsen K, Larsen FKK, Pedersen RT, Albæk E. No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News: Equally Competent and Persuasive. The International Journal of Press/Politics. 2022;28(1):116-137. https://doi.org/10.1177/19401612211025499

Author

Greve-Poulsen, Katrine ; Larsen, Frederik Kristoffer Kjøller ; Pedersen, Rasmus T. ; Albæk, Erik. / No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News : Equally Competent and Persuasive. I: The International Journal of Press/Politics. 2022 ; Bind 28, Nr. 1. s. 116-137.

Bibtex

@article{5f4c8840f12249cdbdd8187d3a0d7286,
title = "No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News: Equally Competent and Persuasive",
abstract = "Experts are prevalent and persuasive in modern media coverage of politics. The perceived competence of experts makes them popular sources in the media, and their statements can in some cases move citizens{\textquoteright} policy opinions substantially. However, men are generally used far more as experts than women are. Because of this predominance of male experts and general biases against women, we theorize that media audiences may find women to be less competent and consequently less persuasive as experts on policy issues. We investigate this through two experiments embedded in a survey with more than 2000 respondents in Denmark. Despite advances in gender equality, women are still in the minority among experts used in the Danish news media. However, despite this current gender imbalance, we find no gender biases against women as policy experts among the Danish news media audience. There are no significant differences in the perceptions of the competence of male and female experts, and the persuasiveness of the experts are also unrelated to the gender of the expert. These results hold across different policy issues, and across practically all demographics within the media audiences. These results are relevant both to the study of gender representation in the mass media, and to the study of gender biases more generally. Furthermore, the results are important for discussions on news media selection of experts",
author = "Katrine Greve-Poulsen and Larsen, {Frederik Kristoffer Kj{\o}ller} and Pedersen, {Rasmus T.} and Erik Alb{\ae}k",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1177/19401612211025499",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "116--137",
journal = "The International Journal of Press/Politics",
issn = "1940-1612",
publisher = "Sage Journals",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - No Gender Bias in Audience Perceptions of Male and Female Experts in the News

T2 - Equally Competent and Persuasive

AU - Greve-Poulsen, Katrine

AU - Larsen, Frederik Kristoffer Kjøller

AU - Pedersen, Rasmus T.

AU - Albæk, Erik

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Experts are prevalent and persuasive in modern media coverage of politics. The perceived competence of experts makes them popular sources in the media, and their statements can in some cases move citizens’ policy opinions substantially. However, men are generally used far more as experts than women are. Because of this predominance of male experts and general biases against women, we theorize that media audiences may find women to be less competent and consequently less persuasive as experts on policy issues. We investigate this through two experiments embedded in a survey with more than 2000 respondents in Denmark. Despite advances in gender equality, women are still in the minority among experts used in the Danish news media. However, despite this current gender imbalance, we find no gender biases against women as policy experts among the Danish news media audience. There are no significant differences in the perceptions of the competence of male and female experts, and the persuasiveness of the experts are also unrelated to the gender of the expert. These results hold across different policy issues, and across practically all demographics within the media audiences. These results are relevant both to the study of gender representation in the mass media, and to the study of gender biases more generally. Furthermore, the results are important for discussions on news media selection of experts

AB - Experts are prevalent and persuasive in modern media coverage of politics. The perceived competence of experts makes them popular sources in the media, and their statements can in some cases move citizens’ policy opinions substantially. However, men are generally used far more as experts than women are. Because of this predominance of male experts and general biases against women, we theorize that media audiences may find women to be less competent and consequently less persuasive as experts on policy issues. We investigate this through two experiments embedded in a survey with more than 2000 respondents in Denmark. Despite advances in gender equality, women are still in the minority among experts used in the Danish news media. However, despite this current gender imbalance, we find no gender biases against women as policy experts among the Danish news media audience. There are no significant differences in the perceptions of the competence of male and female experts, and the persuasiveness of the experts are also unrelated to the gender of the expert. These results hold across different policy issues, and across practically all demographics within the media audiences. These results are relevant both to the study of gender representation in the mass media, and to the study of gender biases more generally. Furthermore, the results are important for discussions on news media selection of experts

U2 - 10.1177/19401612211025499

DO - 10.1177/19401612211025499

M3 - Journal article

VL - 28

SP - 116

EP - 137

JO - The International Journal of Press/Politics

JF - The International Journal of Press/Politics

SN - 1940-1612

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 280286405