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by mattkrause
2205 days ago
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No, I don't think that's a correct interpretation: if women are more likely to develop it, then the prevalence isn't equal. Affect and prevalence just focus on rates, not severity. I can only see two ways to make both statements consistent: - Men and women are both likely to have an general 'diagnosis' of imposter syndrome, but women experience more 'acute attacks' of it per unit time. Half of of men and women feel like imposters during a year, but the affected women feel that way twice a week, while the affected men feel it once/week. - Women experience it more severely than men: a male colonel feels like a lt. colonel, but a female colonel feels like a major) Could be some combination of the two...or the writing is just a mess! |
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Severity is the same for both genders (those that have it, feel it with similar enough degree and frequency), but in equal sized groups of men and women, there are more women who exhibit it.