4.3 Article

Men's Hostile Sexism Predicts Skepticism of Sexual Assault Science

期刊

PSYCHOLOGY OF WOMEN QUARTERLY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/03616843231215373

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sexual assault; science skepticism; hostile sexism; self-affirmation

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Two studies examined reactions to sexual assault research and found that hostile sexism predicted skepticism towards the findings. This suggests the need for additional strategies to effectively communicate sexual assault-related science to hostile audiences.
Sexual assault statistics are both widely disseminated and routinely challenged. Two studies investigated reactions to sexual assault research through the lens of ideologically motivated science denial. In particular, hostile sexism was expected to positively predict skepticism of sexual assault research. In Study 1, adult men in the United States (N = 316) reported their hostile sexism, then read one of three research summaries and reported their skepticism of the findings. Although there was no difference in skepticism across conditions, hostile sexism was a stronger predictor of skepticism regarding sexual assault research than of skepticism regarding breast cancer or alcohol abuse research. In Study 2 (N = 254), a standard self-affirmation manipulation failed to alter the hostile sexism-skepticism relation. Given that people deny science when it contradicts their ideology, it was posited that the research substantiating sexual assault had clashed with hostilely sexist views of women. Strategies beyond standard self-affirmation interventions, such as scientific literacy psychoeducation, may thus be needed to effectively communicate sexual assault-relevant science to hostile audiences.

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