University of Essex, Colchester, Essex, UK.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 May;37(9-10):NP7343-NP7368. doi: 10.1177/0886260520957678. Epub 2020 Sep 29.
Failure to acknowledge that one has been the victim of sexual violence is an important, yet understudied, barrier that prevents women from seeking appropriate support following sexual violence. Drawing from a literature of demonstrating the benefits of self-distancing when evaluating emotionally charged personal information, the effects of self-distancing on acknowledgment of sexual assault were tested. Four experimental studies ( = 1,609) manipulated perspective-taking, either by asking women to imagine a series of hypothetical sexual encounters as experiences that happened to themselves or to their friends, or by asking women to describe a sexual experience from a first- or third-person perspective. Findings from the studies suggest that taking another person's perspective can help women to label ambiguous sexual experiences as more inappropriate and coercive. Notably, this did not seem to stem from women downplaying or dismissing experiences when they imagined themselves, as they reported anticipating more negative and less positive emotions in the scenarios where they imagined themselves compared to a friend. Nonetheless, in spite of the stronger anticipated negative emotional response when imagining themselves, women were less open to information about resources associated with sexual assault and support when they imagined themselves compared to a friend. This pattern of findings replicated for own, past sexual experiences but only to the extent that women spontaneously engaged in distanced perspective-taking themselves. This research suggests in addition to using contextual information to disambiguate and determine whether a sexual experience was inappropriate, taking a distanced perspective might provide a route through which women can come to terms with the experience and open up to the use of community-based services and sexual assault resources.
未能承认自己曾遭受性暴力是一个重要但研究不足的障碍,它阻止了女性在遭受性暴力后寻求适当的支持。本研究借鉴了大量文献,证明了在评估情绪化的个人信息时自我疏远的好处,测试了自我疏远对性侵犯承认的影响。四项实验研究(n=1609)通过要求女性将一系列假设的性经历想象为发生在自己或朋友身上的经历,或者要求女性从第一人称或第三人称的角度描述性经历,从而操纵了观点采择。研究结果表明,从他人的角度看问题可以帮助女性将模棱两可的性经历标记为更不恰当和强制性的。值得注意的是,这似乎并不是因为女性在想象自己时淡化或忽视了自己的经历,因为她们报告说,与想象自己相比,在想象自己的情景中,她们预计会有更多的负面情绪和更少的积极情绪。尽管如此,尽管在想象自己时会产生更强烈的预期负面情绪反应,但与想象自己的朋友相比,女性对与性侵犯和支持相关的资源信息的开放性较低。这种发现模式也适用于自己的过去性经历,但前提是女性自己自发地进行了疏远的视角转换。这项研究表明,除了使用背景信息来消除歧义并确定性经历是否不恰当之外,采取疏远的视角可能是女性接受性经历并接受基于社区的服务和性侵犯资源的一种途径。