“…Instead, women are expected to appropriately display emotions such as sadness, happiness, fear, jealousy, surprise, embarrassment, shame, and guilt in communal contexts (Brescoll, 2016;Durik et al, 2006;Fabes & Martin, 1991;Fischbach et al, 2015;Zhu et al, 2020). Men are expected to display other emotions such as anger, contempt, disgust, and pride within individual context (Brescoll, 2016;Durik et al, 2006;Fabes & Martin, 1991;Fischbach et al, 2015;Zhu et al, 2020). This gendered stereotyping of emotion is subject to confirmation bias, meaning that people tend to align with them in their own behavior, expect others to do the same, and interpret ambiguous expressions of emotion according to the stereotypes (Plant et al, 2000;Zigerell, 2017).…”