The Freeman

Online Images Reinforce Gender Stereotype­s More Than Text

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Images on the internet reinforce gender stereotype­s – such as doctors being men or nurses women – more than text, contributi­ng to a lasting bias against women, a US-based study said recently.

The importance of images has soared as much of the world's media, communicat­ion and even social interactio­ns have moved online.

But this rising dominance of the image "exacerbate­s gender bias" by significan­tly under-representi­ng women, according to the study in the journal Nature.

Lead author Douglas Guilbeault, a researcher at the business school of the University of California, Berkeley, told AFP that this was an "alarming" trend.

He warned of "the potential consequenc­es this can have on reinforcin­g stereotype­s that are harmful, mostly to women, but also to men."

Study co-author Solene Delecourt, also from UC Berkeley, said an example would be if a child was trying to find out more about a profession online but only saw images of one gender.

"They may feel like they don't belong," she said.

Images are also "often more memorable and emotionall­y evocative than text," the study said.

'Really concerning'

For the study, the researcher­s sifted through more than one million images from Google, Wikipedia and the IMDb film database, as well as billions of words on those platforms.

They looked for potential bias in nearly 3,000 social categories, including jobs such as doctor or lawyer, or roles such as neighbor or colleague.

Both over-represente­d men, but the images displayed even more gender bias than the words, the researcher­s found.

For example, the stereotype that women are nurses was "consistent­ly stronger" in the images than the text, Guilbeault said.

This bias was not limited to the United States – the researcher­s used many images from websites around the world – nor was it confined to a particular platform.

The gender bias is also larger than what the general public broadly think, according to an opinion poll carried out by the researcher­s.

The team also used US census data to show that the under-representa­tion of women for these jobs seen in online images does not match reality.

Finally, they looked into what psychologi­cal impact this bias has on people using the internet.

They had 450 people search online for specific jobs – such as astronaut, poet or neurobiolo­gist – some reading text while others looked at images.

Afterwards, the participan­ts carried out a test designed to measure their bias.

The group that looked up images had a more pronounced gender bias – and the effect was still present during another test three days later, the researcher­s said.

"Images influence people in ways that they may not consciousl­y realize," Guilbeault said.

He also lamented that there has been so little attention paid to "this shift towards image-based communicat­ion".

The researcher­s pointed to the role of online platforms in amplifying gender bias through their images, calling for more to be done.

They also warned that new image generators driven by artificial intelligen­ce algorithms draw heavily on existing online images.

"It's not a surprise that the images these algorithms generate reflect all kinds of biases," Guilbeault said. (by Pierre Celerier/AFP)

 ?? ?? Images on the internet reinforce gender stereotype­s – such as doctors being men or nurses women – more than text, contributi­ng to a lasting bias against women, a US-based study said recently.
Images on the internet reinforce gender stereotype­s – such as doctors being men or nurses women – more than text, contributi­ng to a lasting bias against women, a US-based study said recently.
 ?? ?? A Google Images search with the keyword “teacher” yields images of mostly female teachers than male.
A Google Images search with the keyword “teacher” yields images of mostly female teachers than male.
 ?? ?? A Goggle Images search with the keyword “mechanic” yields images of mostly male mechanics than female.
A Goggle Images search with the keyword “mechanic” yields images of mostly male mechanics than female.

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