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- Title
DIFFERENCES IN SELF-REPORTED LEADERSHIP BEHAVIOR AS A FUNCTION OF BIOLOGICAL SEX AND PSYCHOLOGICAL GENDER.
- Authors
Welder-Hatfield, Deborah
- Abstract
This article presents a study, which examines jointly the effects of biological sex and psychological gender on self-reported leadership behavior. The study determined whether self-reported communicative differences in leadership behavior could be better explained by the results obtained as a function of biological sex or psychological gender. The results showed that psychological gender affected significant results on five of the seven dimensions and explained from 10 percent to 33 percent of the variance on each of these dimensions. A significant effect for biological sex, accounting for only 6 percent of the variance, was found on the nurturer dimension.
- Subjects
LEADERSHIP; GENDER; SEXUAL psychology; HUMAN sexuality; ATTITUDE (Psychology); HUMAN behavior
- Publication
Women's Studies in Communication, 1987, Vol 10, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0749-1409
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1080/07491409.1987.11089700