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Remember me? The role of gender and racial attributes in memory

Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, ISSN: 2214-8043, Vol: 104, Page: 102008
2023
  • 0
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 15
    Captures
  • 8
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Captures
    15
  • Mentions
    8
    • News Mentions
      7
      • 7
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • 1

Most Recent Blog

Gender or race may make you forgettable

I have to admit: I’m really bad at recognizing people. That’s why I try to be friendly to everybody. And I think I’m pretty neutral in who I don’t recognize. But maybe I’m not. This new study shows that gender or race can affect how easily you’re forgotten. Women appear more likely to be sorted into “broad categories” than white men. These findings suggest that imperfect recall could lead to diffe

Most Recent News

How Gender and Race Can Make You Forgettable

New research suggests that women and racial minorities can be remembered more when they are few, but are more likely to be confused with others

Article Description

Remembering people is at the core of many social and economic relationships. We present evidence of systematic biases in the way we remember people, based on two experiments. The first experiment is conducted in a real professional setting - academia. Participants of two academic conferences are asked to recall ‘who presented what’ a month after attending the conferences. The second experiment is a controlled version of the first. Participants are shown pictures of people, matched with the title of a paper. We exogenously vary the relative shares of women and non-white individuals. In both experiments, we find evidence that women and ethnic minorities are more likely to be remembered in settings where they are in a small minority. In contrast, they are more likely to be confused with each other when they are in larger fraction. These findings are in line with a theory of categorization. People with minority attributes appear to be “blended together.” We conjecture that these biases in remembering could have important implications for the formation of professional networks.

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