Gender biases have been documented in many areas including hiring, promotion, or performance evaluations. Many of these decisions are made by committees. We experimentally investigate whether committee deliberation contributes to gender biases. In our experiments, participants perform a real effort task and then rate the task performance of other participants. Across treatments we vary the extent of deliberation possible. We find that deliberation increases gender biases. We explore several mechanisms and test two interventions. Randomizing the order of speaking does not reduce gender bias, but an information intervention where raters are informed of gender bias in prior sessions does
An increasing number of countries are introducing gender quotas in scientific committees. We analyze...
The present research investigated the spontaneous reference to the criteria of competence, morality...
We introduce a mechanism for eliciting beliefs that combines the simple use of monetary incentives w...
This paper provides empirical evidence on the aggregation of information in committees. We analyze u...
The intention behind imposing quotas for women on corporate boards is to close the gender gap in eco...
The present research investigated the spontaneous reference to the criteria of competence, morality,...
We investigate how men and women are evaluated in group discussions. In five studies (N = 761) using...
We investigate how men and women are evaluated in group discussions. In five studies (N = 761) using...
Women make up the majority of doctoral degree earners yet remain underrepresented in tenure-track po...
When and why do women gain from increased descriptive representation in deliberating bodies? Using a...
M. R. Banaji and A. G. Greenwald (1995) demonstrated a gender bias in fame judgments—that is, an inc...
Explicit gender bias has been found using both experiments and field studies to favor men in hiring,...
Gender bias in the evaluation of job candidates has been demonstrated in business, government, and a...
Better understanding and reducing gender gaps in the labor market remains an important policy goal. ...
Better understanding and reducing gender gaps in the labor market remains an important policy goal. ...
An increasing number of countries are introducing gender quotas in scientific committees. We analyze...
The present research investigated the spontaneous reference to the criteria of competence, morality...
We introduce a mechanism for eliciting beliefs that combines the simple use of monetary incentives w...
This paper provides empirical evidence on the aggregation of information in committees. We analyze u...
The intention behind imposing quotas for women on corporate boards is to close the gender gap in eco...
The present research investigated the spontaneous reference to the criteria of competence, morality,...
We investigate how men and women are evaluated in group discussions. In five studies (N = 761) using...
We investigate how men and women are evaluated in group discussions. In five studies (N = 761) using...
Women make up the majority of doctoral degree earners yet remain underrepresented in tenure-track po...
When and why do women gain from increased descriptive representation in deliberating bodies? Using a...
M. R. Banaji and A. G. Greenwald (1995) demonstrated a gender bias in fame judgments—that is, an inc...
Explicit gender bias has been found using both experiments and field studies to favor men in hiring,...
Gender bias in the evaluation of job candidates has been demonstrated in business, government, and a...
Better understanding and reducing gender gaps in the labor market remains an important policy goal. ...
Better understanding and reducing gender gaps in the labor market remains an important policy goal. ...
An increasing number of countries are introducing gender quotas in scientific committees. We analyze...
The present research investigated the spontaneous reference to the criteria of competence, morality...
We introduce a mechanism for eliciting beliefs that combines the simple use of monetary incentives w...