Operationalizing Perceptions of Agent Gender: Foundations and Guidelines
Paper in proceeding, 2026

The "gender" of intelligent agents, virtual characters, social robots, and other agentic machines has emerged as a fundamental topic in studies of people's interactions with computers. Perceptions of agent gender can help explain user attitudes and behaviours - from preferences to toxicity to stereotyping - across a variety of systems and contexts of use. Yet, standards in capturing perceptions of agent gender do not exist. A scoping review was conducted to clarify how agent gender has been operationalized - labelled, defined, and measured - as a perceptual variable. One-third of studies manipulated but did not measure agent gender. Norms in operationalizations remain obscure, limiting comprehension of results, congruity in measurement, and comparability for meta-analyses. The dominance of the gender binary model and latent anthropocentrism have placed arbitrary limits on knowledge generation and reified the status quo. We contribute a systematically-developed and theory-driven meta-level framework that offers operational clarity and practical guidance for greater rigour and inclusivity.

Operationalization

Terminology

Intelligent Agents

Human-Agent Interaction

Gender Perceptions

Social Robotics

Scoping Review

Author

Katie Seaborn

Institute of Science Tokyo

University of Cambridge

Madeleine Steeds

University College Dublin

Ilaria Torre

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction Design and Software Engineering

University of Gothenburg

Martina De Cet

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction Design and Software Engineering

Katie Winkle

Uppsala University

Marcus Göransson

Uppsala University

Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Proceedings

731
9798400722783 (ISBN)

2026 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, CHI 2026
Barcelona, Spain,

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Psychology

Human Computer Interaction

Computer Systems

DOI

10.1145/3772318.3790344

More information

Latest update

5/25/2026