Publication | Closed Access
The relationship between men's sexual aggression inside and outside the laboratory.
65
Citations
18
References
1994
Year
Sexual HealthBehavioral SciencesAggressive VignettesSexual ViolenceSocial BehaviorGender StudiesSocial SciencesLaboratory AnalogueHuman SexualityAggression ManagementSexual AssaultSexual BehaviorAggressionPsychologySexual AggressionAggressive Behavior
The purpose of this study was to develop a laboratory analogue of sexually aggressive behavior. Subjects viewed neutral, sexual-violent, and violent-sexual film vignettes and chose a vignette to show to a female confederate. Among highly sexually aggressive men (n = 25) according to the Coercive Sexuality Scale (CSS; Rapaport & Burkhart, 1984), 24% showed the sexual-violent vignette and 28% showed the violent-sexual vignette. Among men who did not report being sexually aggressive on the CSS (n = 13), none showed the sexual-violent vignette and only one showed the violent-sexual vignette. The between-group difference in vignette showing was statistically significant (p < .024). Subjects who showed the sexually aggressive vignettes reported that the female confederate was upset (p < .0001) and uncomfortable (p < .0001) in viewing these vignettes more than the subjects did who showed the neutral vignette. These results support the validity of this film-showing procedure as a laboratory analogue of sexually aggressive behavior.
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