2012
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2087613
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When Performance Trumps Gender Bias: Joint Versus Separate Evaluation

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Cited by 41 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Then they are "more sensitive" to quality in the choice set {High, Low, P ool} (High is always chosen and Low is never chosen), than in {High, P ool} and {Low, P ool} (High and Low are equally likely to be chosen in each case). We do however show that Bohnet et al (2015)'s subjects exhibit violations of WARP that point to implicit preferences, though we believe are harder to interpret.…”
Section: Bohnet Et Al (2015) On Gender Preferencescontrasting
confidence: 71%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Then they are "more sensitive" to quality in the choice set {High, Low, P ool} (High is always chosen and Low is never chosen), than in {High, P ool} and {Low, P ool} (High and Low are equally likely to be chosen in each case). We do however show that Bohnet et al (2015)'s subjects exhibit violations of WARP that point to implicit preferences, though we believe are harder to interpret.…”
Section: Bohnet Et Al (2015) On Gender Preferencescontrasting
confidence: 71%
“…While intuitively the variation in frequency of certain choices points to implicit preferences (as we have argued, considering multiple candidates increases revealingness with respect to their attributes), in fact we show that it is not possible to infer implicit preferences from these data: regular, transitive preferences will generate the patterns of choice that Bohnet et al (2015)'s tests interpret as varying sensitivity. A simple 59 Note that this test is not a valid parallel scissors in general for detecting an implicit preference over work ethic: the target in both scissors is Excellent, while parallel scissors would require one Poor and one Excellent target (see Proposition 5).…”
Section: Bohnet Et Al (2015) On Gender Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 62%
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“…Figure A.3 in Appendix A shows a sample of the screen employers encountered. We presented information about applicants jointly in pairs following work by Bohnet et al (2012) which shows that joint evaluation reduces gender bias compared with separate evaluation. This enabled us to further isolate individual gender preferences as a source of hiring bias instead of other environmental factors.…”
Section: Hiring Task For Employersmentioning
confidence: 99%