AI, Stock Photography, and Image Banks: Gender Biases and Stereotypes

Main Article Content

Pere Freixa
Mar Redondo Arolas
Lluís Codina
Carlos Lopezosa

Objectives
This study explores the prevalence of gender biases, stereotypes, and representational disparities in stock image banks, contrasting traditional photography platforms with AI-generated visual content. The research aims to assess whether AI mitigates or perpetuates existing biases and stereotypes in visual representation.
Methodology
A case study approach was adopted, analyzing 600 images from four platforms: Shutterstock, Getty Images (traditional stock), Lexica (Stable Diffusion), and Adobe Stock (AI-generated). Standardized prompts, such as "Photography of a smiling person in [location]," were used to ensure comparability. A systematic framework evaluated parameters like gender, age, ethnicity, and the presence of stereotypical elements, revealing trends across platforms.
Findings
The findings confirm persistent biases in both traditional and AI-generated platforms. Traditional stock banks overrepresent women, while AI platforms achieve closer gender balance. Ethnic representation remains heavily skewed toward Eurocentric and Caucasian archetypes, with AI showing slight improvements in Afro-American representation. Age portrayals vary, with AI favoring younger demographics and traditional platforms emphasizing adults. Notably, no images depict individuals with disabilities, highlighting a significant gap in diversity. Stereotypes related to beauty standards, such as the use of makeup and accessories, and leisure activities dominate, with minimal representation of professional or diverse cultural roles.
Value
This study provides a comprehensive comparative analysis of traditional and AI-driven stock imagery, highlighting both the limitations and potential of AI to address biases. It contributes a systematic framework for evaluating diversity and representation, offering critical insights for fostering inclusivity in visual media.

Keywords
Gender Bias, Stereotypes, Photojournalism, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Stock Photography, Image Banks

Article Details

How to Cite
Freixa, Pere et al. “AI, Stock Photography, and Image Banks: Gender Biases and Stereotypes”. Hipertext.net, 2025, no. 30, pp. 41-78, doi:10.31009/hipertext.net.2025.i30.05.
Author Biographies

Pere Freixa, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Pere Freixa holds a PhD from the University of Barcelona. He is a professor and researcher in the Department of Communication at He is a member of the DigiDoc group and has specialized in interactive communication and visual communication (Unesco codes: 630899 Interactive Communication; 629900 Photography and visual content; 580101 Visual Media). In recent years, the focus of his research has been on three specific areas: (1) the development of interactive narratives in cybermedia; (2) the innovation of visual and photojournalistic formats; and (3) the transformation of content and its sustainability, in relation to its creation, production processes, and consumption. This research has been documented in more than 30 indexed articles, approximately 40 chapters and books, and more than 40 other publications. Furthermore, he has contributed to 29 research and transfer projects, in 4 of them as PI.

Mar Redondo Arolas, Universitat de Barcelona

Mar Redondo Arolas holds a PhD and a degree in Fine Arts from the University of Barcelona, where she serves as a professor and researcher specializing in photography within the Department of Visual Arts and Design at the University of Barcelona. Since 2014, she has been an active member of the consolidated research group Art, Poetry, and Education (UB). Her research focuses on interdisciplinary liminal poetics, education and social commitment, identity construction processes through images, the intersection of art and science, and the curatorial and publishing practices of photography. Her findings have been widely shared at conferences and published in books and journals, she showcased her work in national and international exhibitions.

Lluís Codina, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Lluís Codina is currently an honorary professor and researcher at the Pompeu Fabra University of Barcelona. His teaching activity has been focused on the Faculty of Communication, on the Degrees in Journalism and Audiovisual Communication, as well as he has been a professor of research master's degrees. It is part of the DigiDoc Research Group (UPF), a group recognized by the Generalitat of Catalonia (SGR-01103). He has been part of the academic staff and has also taught in Master's degrees at the Barcelona School of Management – UPF. He is director of the Cybermedia Observatory (UPF) and has been principal investigator (PI) of various projects funded by the national R&D&i plan of the Ministry of Science and Technology of Spain. He is a member of the Governing Board of the Catalan Communication Society, a subsidiary of the Institute of Catalan Studies.

Carlos Lopezosa, Universitat de Barcelona

Carlos Lopezosa holds a PhD in Journalism from the Universitat Pompeu Fabra and is an assistant professor at the Department of Library Science, Documentation, and Audiovisual Communication at the University of Barcelona. His doctoral thesis focused on studying the factors influencing the ranking of content-intensive websites, particularly online media, as well as evaluating SEO analysis tools. He is a specialist in search engine optimization (SEO) and monetization systems based on quality content strategies. He has also been an associate professor at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, teaching in the Faculty of Communication in the Bachelor’s programs in Journalism, Audiovisual Communication, and Advertising and Public Relations.

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