Don’t Objectify Me!: Sexual Self-Monitoring, Coping, and Psychological Maladjustment

Catherine Baggett, C. Nagoshi, Julie L Nagoshi
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Abstract

Undergraduate college students (283 females, 127 males) completed surveys aimed at measuring positive sexual awareness vs. sexual self-monitoring, coping styles, and psychopathological symptoms. Positive sexual awareness significantly positively correlated with adaptive coping styles but did not otherwise correlate with psychopathological symptoms. Sexual self-monitoring was significantly positively correlated with somatization, depression-anxiety, and avoidant coping in women but not men. Bootstrapped mediation analyses indicated that the relationships between sexual self-monitoring and somatization, depression-anxiety, and eating disorder symptoms were significantly mediated by avoidant coping in women but not in men. These results were explained in terms of Objectification Theory, suggesting that women who experience sexual objectification are more likely to engage in avoidant coping, thus increasing their risk of developing psychopathology. Findings are discussed in terms of broader issues of the disempowering effects of objectification.
别把我物化!性自我监控、应对与心理失调
本科生(283名女性,127名男性)完成了旨在衡量积极的性意识与性自我监控、应对方式和精神病理症状的调查。积极的性意识与适应性应对方式显著正相关,但与精神病理症状无关。性自我监控与躯体化、抑郁焦虑和回避性应对在女性中呈显著正相关,在男性中无显著正相关。bootstrap中介分析表明,回避性应对对性自我监控与躯体化、抑郁焦虑和饮食失调症状的关系有显著的调节作用,而对男性无显著调节作用。这些结果是根据物化理论解释的,这表明经历过性物化的女性更有可能采取回避型应对,从而增加了她们患精神病理的风险。研究结果讨论了更广泛的问题,即物化的消极影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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