Blake Khandis R, Bastian Brock, Denson Thomas F
School of Psychology, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia.
Aggress Behav. 2016 Sep;42(5):483-97. doi: 10.1002/ab.21644. Epub 2016 Feb 5.
Researchers have become increasingly interested in the saturation of popular Western culture by female hypersexualization. We provide data showing that men have more sexually aggressive intentions toward women who self-sexualize, and that self-sexualized women are vulnerable to sexual aggression if two qualifying conditions are met. Specifically, if perceivers view self-sexualized women as sexually open and lacking agency (i.e., the ability to influence one's environment), they harbor more sexually aggressive intentions and view women as easier to sexually victimize. In Experiment 1, male participants viewed a photograph of a woman whose self-sexualization was manipulated through revealing versus non-revealing clothing. In subsequent experiments, men and women (Experiment 2) and men only (Experiment 3) viewed a photograph of a woman dressed in non-revealing clothing but depicted as open or closed to sexual activity. Participants rated their perceptions of the woman's agency, then judged how vulnerable she was to sexual aggression (Experiments 1 and 2) or completed a sexually aggressive intentions measure (Experiment 3). Results indicated that both men and women perceived self-sexualized women as more vulnerable to sexual aggression because they assumed those women were highly sexually open and lacked agency. Perceptions of low agency also mediated the relationship between women's perceived sexual openness and men's intentions to sexually aggress. These effects persisted even when we described the self-sexualized woman as possessing highly agentic personality traits and controlled for individual differences related to sexual offending. The current work suggests that perceived agency and sexual openness may inform perpetrator decision-making and that cultural hypersexualization may facilitate sexual aggression. Aggr. Behav. 42:483-497, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
研究人员越来越关注西方流行文化中女性过度性化的现象。我们提供的数据表明,男性对自我性化的女性有更强的性侵犯意图,并且如果满足两个限定条件,自我性化的女性容易遭受性侵犯。具体而言,如果观察者认为自我性化的女性在性方面开放且缺乏自主性(即影响自身环境的能力),他们就会怀有更强的性侵犯意图,并认为这些女性更容易成为性侵犯的受害者。在实验1中,男性参与者观看了一张通过穿着暴露与非暴露服装来操控自我性化程度的女性照片。在后续实验中,男性和女性(实验2)以及仅男性(实验3)观看了一张穿着非暴露服装但被描绘为对性活动开放或保守的女性照片。参与者对他们对该女性自主性的看法进行评分,然后判断她遭受性侵犯的可能性(实验1和2)或完成一项性侵犯意图测量(实验3)。结果表明,男性和女性都认为自我性化的女性更容易遭受性侵犯,因为他们认为这些女性在性方面非常开放且缺乏自主性。对低自主性的看法也介导了女性被感知的性开放程度与男性性侵犯意图之间的关系。即使我们将自我性化的女性描述为具有高度自主性的人格特质并控制了与性犯罪相关的个体差异,这些影响仍然存在。当前的研究表明,感知到的自主性和性开放程度可能会影响犯罪者的决策,并且文化上的过度性化可能会助长性侵犯行为。《攻击行为》42:483 - 497,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司