Brilliance as gender deviance: Gender-role incongruity as another barrier to women's success in academic fields

Boglarka Nyul, Inna Ksenofontov, Alexandra Fleischmann, Rotem Kahalon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

“Brilliance,” a state of extreme intellectual ability, is stereotypically associated with men but not women. Research finds that portrayals of brilliance as a prerequisite for success contribute to women's underrepresentation in certain academic fields and high-level positions. In this work, we examined whether gender roles contribute to the perception of women as less brilliant. In four preregistered experimental studies (N = 920), we tested whether brilliance deviates from ascribed and prescribed gender roles more for women than for men and whether such deviation places women who display their brilliance at a higher risk of experiencing backlash. In Study 1, an average intelligent and a brilliant man were rated as more similar on gender-specific traits than an average intelligent and a brilliant woman. In Study 2, while intelligence and gender individually influenced prescriptions of masculinity and femininity, their interaction did not support larger differences for female targets, indicating a lack of differential expectations by gender and intelligence. Study 3 showed that brilliant women are more likely to experience backlash at work than brilliant men, while Study 4 demonstrated that while brilliance enhances professional desirability across genders, it decreases social desirability, suggesting social costs that could affect workplace dynamics. Our results support that brilliance can be considered a form of gender-role deviance for women and might lead to a backlash. This underscores the need for policies to counteract gendered stereotypes of brilliance, which hinder women's career advancement and contribute to the gender gap in the workplace.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104680
JournalJournal of Experimental Social Psychology
Volume116
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors

Keywords

  • Backlash
  • Brilliance
  • Descriptive gender norms
  • Prescriptive gender norms
  • Role congruity

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