In fact, it's not even the real Barbie. The image of Barbie in a power suit is from a from a 2005 Onion article stating that "women don't run companies," they just "work behind the scenes to bring a man's vision to light."
The University of Washington argues in a new study that it's results like these that subconsciously contribute to gender bias.
The study finds that "manipulated image search results could determine, on average, 7 percent of a study participant's subsequent opinion about how many men and women work in a particular field."
In Google Images' results for CEO only 11% of the results returned were women despite the fact that 27% of CEOs in the US are female.
In contrast, results for jobs such as "telemarketer" yielded 64% women, though in reality that occupation is evenly split between men and women.
Oh hey this CEO image search thing gets even better @chillmage pic.twitter.com/RxiHGeENPB
- Eileen Ridge (@notbangalore) April 9, 2015
To be fair, Google doesn't arbitrarily create these categories or unfairly rank the results. Google Image results are ordered by a supposedly unbiased artificial intelligence algorithm and searches on Yahoo and Bing yielded similar ratios.
Report co-author Sean Munson says that "Our hope is that this will become a question that designers of search engines might actually ask."
"I would feel better if people are at least aware of the consequences and are making conscious choices around them."