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Seeing men as the 'default' may be tied to attitudes towards politicians and Black people

Seeing men as the "default" may be tied to attitudes to politicians, Black people
Plot of regional attitude differences. Regional differences in whether group attitudes are more strongly related to attitudes toward the men or women of the group for (A) attitudes toward politicians, (B) attitudes toward police, and (C) attitudes toward criminals. Credit: Phills et al., 2025, PLOS One, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

In an international study, participants' attitudes toward certain social groups—namely, politicians and Black people—were more strongly related to their attitudes towards the men than the women of each group, suggesting that men are the "default" for attitudes towards these groups.

Curtis Edward Phills of the University of Oregon, U.S., and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal .

Prior research has shown how people often discuss some social groups as though they are primarily made up of men, and studies have further explored this view of men as default group members in the contexts of stereotyping, categorization, and memory. For instance, stereotypes about Black people in general align far more closely with stereotypes about Black men than Black women.

However, research on men as the default in the context of attitudes toward different social groups—such as how warm or positive people feel toward each group—is limited.

To deepen their understanding, Phills and colleagues analyzed data from 5,177 who took a survey measuring their attitudes toward people in general: Black, East Asian, and , , politicians, and criminals. The survey also measured attitudes toward the women and men, separately, of each group.

In general, participants' attitudes toward politicians and Black people were more closely tied to their attitudes towards the men than the women of each group—suggesting "man" as the default for attitudes towards these groups. However, attitudes toward white people were more closely tied to attitudes toward than white men.

Attitudes toward police officers, criminals, and East Asian people were not strongly related to attitudes toward either the women or men of each group.

Further analysis suggested that female Black and white participants did not see men as the default members of their own racial group. The data also suggest that people in regions with more may be more likely to view men as the default for attitudes toward social groups, but further research is needed to clarify this.

The findings could aid understanding of the different kinds of prejudice faced by women worldwide.

Curtis Edward Phills adds, "When I think about this research I am filled with so much gratitude for the opportunity to have worked with hundreds of researchers around the world. Each researcher dedicated some of their own laboratory time and space to this project because they believed in the value of collaborative team science.

"Team science projects like this one are powerful reminders that there is no universal human psychology—how we differ and how we're similar varies from region to region.

"One of the main findings from this work is that, on average, across all regions in our sample, attitudes toward Black people are much more similar to attitudes toward Black men than Black women. This finding adds to the literature on intersectional invisibility, demonstrating that Black women are often excluded from the category 'Black'—as in people think of a Black man when they imagine a Black person.

"However, the strength of this finding varied from region to region. In fact, regional variability was a key finding for all the groups we studied (white people, East Asian people, politicians, police, and criminals). Though these regional findings should be considered 'preliminary' or 'exploratory,' an important point is that regions that endorsed traditional gender roles were more likely to exclude women from their attitudes toward each group.

"So, overall, the answer to the question of whether 'man' is default in attitudes is: it depends—it depends on which groups and which regions are studied."

More information: Curtis Edward Phills et al, Multi-region investigation of 'man' as default in attitudes, PLOS One (2025).

Journal information: PLoS ONE

Citation: Seeing men as the 'default' may be tied to attitudes towards politicians and Black people (2025, June 25) retrieved 27 June 2025 from /news/2025-06-men-default-attitudes-politicians-black.html
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