Document Type

Poster Presentation

Publication Date

4-18-2025

Year of Award

2025

Date Assignment Submitted

2025

Abstract

This study investigates AI-created gender bias in AI-created images through content analysis, contrasting the way gender is depicted in professions in leading AI image-creation tools such as Chat smith, Adobe Firefly, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion. Employing a quantitative research method, this study contrasts AI-created images of gender-stereotypical careers for both male and female. Non-gendered careers will be used as well to identify patterns of stereotyping and bias. The area of emphasis lies in individual subjects within the images and scrutinizing visual elements such as clothing, accessories, background, face expressions, and gendered roles assigned to each. Particular emphasis is focused to exploring the objectification of female models and positioning of male subjects in bolder or dominating roles—trends that have been consistently raised to prominence in recent research on gender bias in AI-generated images.

Initial findings support previous studies showing that AI models do not just copy but enhance existing social biases embedded in training datasets, producing warped and potentially hazardous gender representations. This study contributes to the ongoing controversy over how ethical AI is produced by demonstrating the way that biases are spatially embodied and how reinforcing stereotypes through AI-created content can have effects in the real world. Drawing from a close analysis of visual results on prominent AI platforms, this analysis identifies the need for increased diversity and inclusion in training sets, improved algorithmic explainability, and cross-disciplinary collaboration between technologists, ethicists, and gender studies researchers to combat gender bias in AI results. Overall, the review requires an ethical consideration toward more authentic and fair presentation of gender within AI-based creations and adoption of fair and socially responsible practices by the industry.

Publisher

Lynn University

Conference/Symposium

Lynn University Student Research Symposium

Contest

Poster Presentation: Health and Social Sciences category

City/State

Boca Raton, FL

Department

College of Communication and Design

Instructor

Faculty Sponsor: Dr. Erika Grodzki

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