Onderwijs Onderzoek Actueel Over de VU EN
Login als
Studiekiezer Student Medewerker
Bachelor Master VU for Professionals
HOVO Amsterdam VU-NT2 VU Amsterdam Summer School Honoursprogramma Universitaire lerarenopleiding
Promoveren aan de VU Uitgelicht onderzoek Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Onderzoeksinstituten Onze wetenschappers Research Impact Support Portal Impact maken
Nieuws Agenda Gezond leven aan de VU
Israël en Palestijnse gebieden Cultuur op de campus
Praktische informatie VU en innovatiedistrict Zuidas Missie en Kernwaarden
Besturing Impact en valorisatie Samenwerken met ons Alumni Werken bij de VU
Sorry! The information you are looking for is only available in Dutch.
Deze opleiding is opgeslagen in Mijn Studiekeuze.
Er is iets fout gegaan bij het uitvoeren van het verzoek.
Er is iets fout gegaan bij het uitvoeren van het verzoek.

Clement Bellet| Erasmus University Rotterdam |17.6.2026

Gender Representation, Stereotypes, and Consumer Beliefs
Gender Representation and Beliefs About Gender: Evidence from the Universe of U.S. TV Ads

Abstract: Advertising reflects and shapes culturally shared beliefs about gender, yet systematic evidence on gender portrayals in advertising and their relationship with consumers' own gender identities remains limited. Using the universe of TV ads aired in the United States between 2010 and 2020, this paper provides the first large-scale descriptive analysis of gender representation across products and brands. 

The analysis complements gender presence with a scalable, belief-based measure of gender-typing in advertising. Four key findings emerge: gender presence is broadly balanced, but portrayals remain strongly gender-typed, especially for men; representation is highly segmented across products, with men confined to male-typical depictions; this segmentation mirrors product-gender associations even without salient gender presence; and male-typical portrayals persist across both male-and female-dominated audiences. Linking advertising content to data on actual and perceived gender gaps in product consumption reveals that gender-typical representation aligns more closely with inaccurate beliefs about consumers' gender than with their actual gender. The results further evidence substantial heterogeneity across brands unexplained by the gender composition of their consumers, including systematic differences by founders' gender. These findings highlight the importance of studying representation beyond mere presence and motivate further research on the economic and societal consequences of inaccurate representation in advertising.

Direct naar

Homepage Cultuur op de campus Universiteitsbibliotheek Dashboard

Studie

Academische jaarkalender Studiegids Rooster Canvas

Uitgelicht

Doneer aan het VUfonds VU Magazine Ad Valvas Digitale toegankelijkheid

Over de VU

Contact en route Werken bij de VU Faculteiten Diensten
Privacy Disclaimer Veiligheid Webcolofon Cookie instellingen Webarchief

Copyright © 2026 - Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam