Marie,

It seems that there should be norms for this in the literature. I've had 
students who were interested in gender stereotypes associated with language. 
some may have developed their own validation of stimuli (by having a few 
individuals rate their stimuli to confirm their intuitions about male/female 
categorizations for words or pictures). If they found formal norms, I might 
have a copy (but that would be in my files at the office and I am at home now).

I did a few searches in PsycINFO to see what I could turn up. I ran across two 
things that might be relevant to your interests (and the puzzle posed by others 
on the list about grammatical gender versus social gender in language use):

Kennison, S. M. & Trofe, J. L. (2003). Comprehending pronouns: A role for 
word-specific gener stereotype information. Journal of Psycholinguistic 
Research, 32, 355-378.

    They describe an initial study in which they collected gender stereotype 
informatin for 405 nouns and noun compounds to identify 32 "masculine" and 32 
"feminine" words for use as materials in a later experiment. No indication in 
the abstract whether they publish the norms or the items selected.

Regarding the grammatical gender / social gender question:

Caccoaro. C., Carreiras, M., & Cionini, C. B. (1997). When words have two 
genders: Anaphor resolution for Italian functionally ambiguous words. Journal 
of Memory & Language, 37, 517-532.

They discuss a manipulation in which the gramatical gender (they call this 
morphosyntactic gender) and what they call semantic gender (which, I assume 
refers to the social stereotype aspect of gender in language) either matched or 
mismatched. As one might expect, gender matches were associated with faster 
processing (during reading) and mismatches slowed processing. 

Lastly, you might check the Psychonomic Society's web pages. They have an 
archive of stimulus norms published in their journals. it is searchable by key 
words. I found one item on the site that might be relevant:

Crawford, J. T., Leynes, P. A., Mayhorn, C. B. & Bink, M. L. (2004). Champagne, 
beer, or coffee? A corpus of gender-related and neurtal words. Behaviora 
Research Methods, Instruments & Computers, 36, 444-458.

Hope these help!

Claudia Stanny

 
-----Original Message-----
From:   Marie Helweg-Larsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:   Sun 1/16/2005 3:25 PM
To:     Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Cc:     
Subject:        Masculine/feminine words?

Hi all
I'm looking for a categorization scheme for determining if words (not 
traits) are feminine or masculine. For example, you might think of 
"butterfly" as feminine and "slug" as masculine but I need some sort of 
categorizing scheme for putting nouns into either feminine, masculine or 
neutral categories.
All the research I've found so far (google and psychinfo plus various 
gender texts) seem to focus on traits (lots of references to Bem) not 
nouns but that must be done by someone?!
Marie

-- 
*********************************************
Marie Helweg-Larsen, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Psychology
Dickinson College, P.O. Box 1773
Carlisle, PA 17013
Office: (717) 245-1562, Fax: (717) 245-1971
Webpage: www.dickinson.edu/~helwegm
*********************************************


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