articlePsychological ScienceSep 24, 2007Closed access

Signaling Threat

Stanford University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

This study examined the cues hypothesis, which holds that situational cues, such as a setting's features and organization, can make potential targets vulnerable to social identity threat. Objective and subjective measures of identity threat were collected from male and female math, science, and engineering (MSE) majors who watched an MSE conference video depicting either an unbalanced ratio of men to women or a balanced ratio. Women who viewed the unbalanced video exhibited more cognitive and physiological vigilance, and reported a lower sense of belonging and less desire to participate in the conference, than did women who viewed the gender-balanced video. Men were unaffected by this situational cue. The…

Citation impact

1,025
total citations
FWCI
57.58
Percentile
100%
References
40
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Situational ethics
  • Social psychology
  • Vigilance (psychology)
  • Social identity theory
  • Vulnerability (computing)
  • Cognition
  • Identity (music)
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