The Mail on Sunday

Scientist says test is ‘sexist’... because right answer is male

- By Charlotte Wace

YOU might have thought the only problem with a training session on data regulation­s would be making sure you stayed awake.

But one presentati­on has been branded sexist by one of Britain’s most distinguis­hed scientists – because in one hypothetic­al example the sole man is shown getting the answer right, while three women get it wrong.

Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, professor of cognitive neuroscien­ce at University College London, was taking part in an online training session when she spotted the offensive material.

A stock photo showed four people d e a l i n g wi t h sensitive data: ‘ Yvonne’ used an unencrpyte­d memory stick, ‘Suzie’ printed everything out, and ‘ Nicole’ used a mobile phone which did not have a protective password or PIN. Only the man got it right, with the slide stating approvingl­y: ‘ Michael is s t ori ng customer data on an encrypted work laptop.’

The training session was organised by Prof Blakemore’s college on the new general data protection regulation (GDPR) introduced by the EU. She tweeted: ‘In the GDPR online training that we at UCL are all enjoying, the girls are all rubbish at encryption but of course Michael nails it. #everydayse­xism hits GDPR training!’

Other Twitter users echoed her outrage, with one saying the photo showed how society ‘just carries on producing gender stereotype­s’. The hashtag ‘ everyday sexism’ refers to a long-standing project founded by feminist author Laura Bates in 2012, collecting casual

‘People are on the lookout to be offended’

examples of women being shown as inferior to men.

But some observers hit back at Prof Blakemore’s comments.

Frank Furedi, emeritus professor of sociology at Kent University, said: ‘There are a growing number of people who are continuall­y on the lookout to be offended, even when no offence is intended. They should be more generous and tolerant and not try to make a mountain where there isn’t even a molehill.’

It is not the first time that Prof Blakemore – the daughter of the eminent neurobiolo­gist Sir Colin Blakemore – has gone on the attack to combat sexism.

In 2016, she criticised the Science Museum for an exhibit which appeared to suggest there are fundamenta­l difference­s between the sexes, asking visitors to t est whether they had a male ‘blue’ or female ‘pink’ brain.

She said it was ‘out of date, to say the least’, adding that she ‘ was pretty shocked by the misleading message, which doesn’t correspond to the evidence’.

 ??  ?? Sarah-Jayne Blakemore ANGRY:
Sarah-Jayne Blakemore ANGRY:

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