In recent years, several empirical studies have claimed to provide evidence in support of the popular folk notion that people possess “gaydar” that enables them to accurately identify who is gay or lesbian (Rule, Johnson, & Freeman, 2016). This conclusion is limited to artificial lab settings, however, and when translated to real-world settings this work itself provides evidence that people’s judgments about who is gay/lesbian are not pragmatically accurate. We also briefly review evidence related to the consequences of perpetuating the idea of gaydar (i.e., “the gaydar myth”). Although past claims about accurate orientation perception are misleading, the work that gave rise to those claims can nevertheless inform the literature in meaningf...
Gender inversion stereotypes characterize straight men as masculine and gay men as feminine. Because...
Perceivers can accurately judge a face’s sexual orientation, but the perceptual mechanisms mediating...
<p><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0036671#pone-0036671-t001" ...
In recent years, several empirical studies have claimed to provide evidence in support of the popula...
Recent media coverage of studies about gaydar, the supposed ability to detect another\u27s sexual ...
Recent media coverage of studies about gaydar, the supposed ability to detect another\u27s sexual ...
Recent media coverage of studies about gaydar, the supposed ability to detect another\u27s sexual ...
Recent media coverage of studies about "gaydar," the supposed ability to detect another's sexual ori...
“Gaydar” is the colloquial term for identifying someone’s sexual orientation from physical cues. Pas...
Individuals guess women’s and men’s sexual orientation on the basis of visual, non-verbal, and vocal...
In the present work, we investigate the pop cultural idea that people have a sixth sense called "gay...
Previous research has largely ignored the relationship between sexual orientation judgement accuracy...
We demonstrate that widely used measures of anti-gay sentiment and the size of the LGBT population a...
Perceivers can accurately judge a face’s sexual orientation, but the perceptual mechanisms mediating...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 34-38)This study examined the relationships between accurate...
Gender inversion stereotypes characterize straight men as masculine and gay men as feminine. Because...
Perceivers can accurately judge a face’s sexual orientation, but the perceptual mechanisms mediating...
<p><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0036671#pone-0036671-t001" ...
In recent years, several empirical studies have claimed to provide evidence in support of the popula...
Recent media coverage of studies about gaydar, the supposed ability to detect another\u27s sexual ...
Recent media coverage of studies about gaydar, the supposed ability to detect another\u27s sexual ...
Recent media coverage of studies about gaydar, the supposed ability to detect another\u27s sexual ...
Recent media coverage of studies about "gaydar," the supposed ability to detect another's sexual ori...
“Gaydar” is the colloquial term for identifying someone’s sexual orientation from physical cues. Pas...
Individuals guess women’s and men’s sexual orientation on the basis of visual, non-verbal, and vocal...
In the present work, we investigate the pop cultural idea that people have a sixth sense called "gay...
Previous research has largely ignored the relationship between sexual orientation judgement accuracy...
We demonstrate that widely used measures of anti-gay sentiment and the size of the LGBT population a...
Perceivers can accurately judge a face’s sexual orientation, but the perceptual mechanisms mediating...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 34-38)This study examined the relationships between accurate...
Gender inversion stereotypes characterize straight men as masculine and gay men as feminine. Because...
Perceivers can accurately judge a face’s sexual orientation, but the perceptual mechanisms mediating...
<p><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0036671#pone-0036671-t001" ...