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From Perceived Effectiveness to Measured Impact: Identity-Aware Evaluation of Automated Counter-Stereotypes

Published: October 27, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.23523v1

By: Svetlana Kiritchenko , Anna Kerkhof , Isar Nejadgholi and more

Potential Business Impact:

Shows how to reduce gender bias online.

Business Areas:
Identity Management Information Technology, Privacy and Security

We investigate the effect of automatically generated counter-stereotypes on gender bias held by users of various demographics on social media. Building on recent NLP advancements and social psychology literature, we evaluate two counter-stereotype strategies -- counter-facts and broadening universals (i.e., stating that anyone can have a trait regardless of group membership) -- which have been identified as the most potentially effective in previous studies. We assess the real-world impact of these strategies on mitigating gender bias across user demographics (gender and age), through the Implicit Association Test and the self-reported measures of explicit bias and perceived utility. Our findings reveal that actual effectiveness does not align with perceived effectiveness, and the former is a nuanced and sometimes divergent phenomenon across demographic groups. While overall bias reduction was limited, certain groups (e.g., older, male participants) exhibited measurable improvements in implicit bias in response to some interventions. Conversely, younger participants, especially women, showed increasing bias in response to the same interventions. These results highlight the complex and identity-sensitive nature of stereotype mitigation and call for dynamic and context-aware evaluation and mitigation strategies.

Country of Origin
🇨🇦 Canada

Page Count
17 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Computers and Society