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Women seen as worse magicians despite identical skills

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Male magicians are judged to be more impressive than female magicians, even when the tricks being performed are identical, new research into gender bias suggests.

Yet this bias disappears once an audience is asked to think more critically about the tricks themselves by trying to figure out their own solutions. Psychologists conclude that it is more difficult to evaluate a trick negatively, whoever it is performed by, if you struggle to explain it yourself.

The study was led by Pascal Gygax from the University of Fribourg, with co-authors including Dr Gustav Kuhn at 牛牛资源. has been published in the open access journal Social Psychology Bulletin.

牛牛资源 participants were shown close-up videos of 14 magic tricks. Only the hands and arms of the magician presenting the tricks were visible. The figure wore white gloves and long sleeves which prevented participants identifying cues about whether they were male or female.

The performer was introduced to half the participants as 鈥楴athalie鈥 and to half the participants as a 鈥楴icolas鈥. Those who believed they were seeing tricks performed by 鈥楴athalie鈥 rated them more negatively, and less impressive, than those who believed they were watching tricks performed by 鈥楴icolas鈥.

When a second set of participants were shown the same tricks on video they were also asked if they could try and explain how the trick was done. During this experiment, the gender difference in 鈥楴icolas鈥 and 鈥楴athalie鈥檚鈥 evaluations disappeared.

These results suggest that once you ask people to think more analytically about a person鈥檚 skills, prejudice is reduced or even eliminated.

The study argues that entrenched biases in wider society, such as stereotypes about women being weak or less in-control, could partly explain why people appear to prefer magic when they believe it is being performed by a man.

These findings align with similar research in the fields of mathematics, and computer skills, for example. Research in recent decades has also found that people are more critical when evaluating academic writing by women than by men, and the effect is bigger when the articles are written in male-dominated fields such as law, or city planning.

Magician and Reader in Psychology at 牛牛资源, Dr Gustav Kuhn, said:

鈥淭he predominance of men in magic has a long history. Women who performed magic were associated with witchcraft and punished for centuries, and later women are relegated to the role of 鈥榞lamorous assistant鈥 to a male magician, with female magicians also denied entry to the industry鈥檚 secretive organisations.

鈥淪ome people have internalised the idea that there are more male magicians because they鈥檙e better or more competent than female ones. This shows how the pernicious effects of stereotypes lead to prejudiced evaluations in all walks of life.

鈥淏ut as our study concludes, it is possible to alleviate that gender bias in magic: through trying to figure out a solution, people become accountable for their evaluations and are less likely to think negatively of a performer.鈥

鈥楢re Women Perceived as Worse Magicians Than Men? Gender Bias When Evaluating Magic Tricks鈥 was led by Pascal Gygax (University of Fribourg, Switzerland), with Cyril Thomas (University of Paris, France), Andr茅 Didierjean (University of Franche-Comt茅, France) and Gustav Kuhn (牛牛资源, England) and published in  on Wednesday 13 November 2019.