ABSTRACT
The social environments people encounter are rich with covarying cues and patterns involving gender. Nevertheless, prevalent methodologies for studying how these public representations of gender shape beliefs are lacking in their ability to make causal claims. Accordingly, we present the Cultural Snapshots approach to more accurately assess how subtle cues in cultural environments impact gender stereotype socialization. Cultural Snapshots first identifies and quantifies cultural patterns in ecologically valid, shared environments (i.e., social ecologies). Next, snapshots of these patterns are selected and used to create experimental conditions and test causal hypotheses. In using stimuli sampled from social ecologies, researchers maintain naturally co-occurring cues specific to the ecology from which the snapshots are taken. This approach can allow researchers to causally test the effect of contextually relevant cultural patterns on social cognition. In this article, we provide a step-by-step guide on designing experimental research using Cultural Snapshots and discuss specific considerations when applying this approach to studying gender stereotype socialization.