Education and Skills

Why male is our default gender

A combination of four pictures show red and green crossing signals for pedestrian and cyclists featuring a woman in the east German town of Fuerstenwalde, south east of Berlin March 7, 2012. The pig-tailed female crossing guard has ousted her traditional, hat-wearing male counterpart inFuerstenwalde in time for International Women's Day on Thursday. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch (GERMANY - Tags: SOCIETY TRANSPORT) - RTR2Z05C

A trio of scientists have developed a theory. Image: REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

Bill Hathaway
Associate Director Science and Medicine, Yale

It’s still a man’s world, a bias revealed in phrases about humanity as “measure of man” or “man shall not live by bread alone,” or the ubiquitous use of pronoun “he” even when subject is not identifiable as a man or woman.

A trio of Yale psychologists have developed theories about why kids identify stuffed animals as male, medical research historically relied on male subjects, and office temperature is set to a man’s comfort level.

Have you read?

April Bailey, Marianne LaFrance, and John Dovidio argue that male’s primary possession of power is one explanation, but has an ally in our own cognitive systems, which tend to make male our default gender. They have published their ideas in journal Review of Personality and Social Psychology.

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