发现的环境线索会影响强奸的可能性吗?

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
Rebecka K Hahnel-Peeters, Aaron T Goetz, Cari D Goetz
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引用次数: 1

摘要

关于男性对女性的性剥削的研究表明,男性的心理会追踪与女性容易被剥削有关的线索。在目前的研究中,我们研究了一种不同类型的线索,假设有助于男性使用性剥削策略:发现可能性的环境线索。我们将发现可能性定义为在从事剥削行为(例如,他人在场)时被识别的感知概率。我们在三项研究中验证了这样一个假设,即当男性对被发现的可能性的认知较低时,他们强奸的可能性会增加。在研究1中,我们对个体(N = 1,881)的回答进行了内容分析,当被问及如果他们可以停止时间或隐形时,他们会做什么。除了“其他”类别没有具体的被提名行为类别外,被提名最多的类别包括性剥削行为,占报告行为的15.3%。两项研究2 (N = 672)和3 (N = 614)都是预先登记的发现可能性操纵,在不同的发现水平上秘密测试男性强奸的可能性。我们发现,在研究2和研究3中,与女性相比,男性被强奸的可能性更高:分别为48%比39.7%和19%比6.8%。在研究2和3中,我们没有发现被发现的可能性对参与者强奸的可能性有统计学影响。我们讨论了如果犯罪者被抓住,同伴的存在如何提供社会保护,使其免受使用性剥削策略的代价。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Do Environmental Cues to Discovery Influence the Likelihood to Rape?

Do Environmental Cues to Discovery Influence the Likelihood to Rape?

Do Environmental Cues to Discovery Influence the Likelihood to Rape?

Do Environmental Cues to Discovery Influence the Likelihood to Rape?

Research on men's sexual exploitation of women has documented that men's psychology tracks cues associated with the ease of women's exploitability. In the current studies, we examined a different class of cues hypothesized to aid men's use of sexually exploitative strategies: environmental cues to the likelihood of discovery. We defined likelihood of discovery as the perceived probability of identification when engaging in exploitative behavior (e.g., presence of others). We test the hypothesis that men's likelihood to rape increases when their perception of the likelihood of discovery is low in three studies. In Study 1, we conducted a content analysis of individuals' responses (N = 1,881) when asked what one would do if they could stop time or be invisible. Besides the "other" category whereby there were no specific category for nominated behaviors, the most nominated category included sexually exploitative behavior-representing 15.3% of reported behaviors. Both Studies 2 (N = 672) and 3 (N = 614) were preregistered manipulations of likelihood of discovery surreptitiously testing men's rape likelihood to rape across varying levels of discovery. We found men, compared to women, reported a statistically higher likelihood to rape in both Studies 2 and 3: 48% compared to 39.7% and 19% compared to 6.8%, respectively. Across Studies 2 and 3, we found no statistical effect of the likelihood of discovery on participants' likelihood to rape. We discuss how the presence of one's peers may provide social protection against the costs of using an exploitative sexual strategy if a perpetrator is caught.

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来源期刊
Evolutionary Psychology
Evolutionary Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
22
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Psychology is an open-access peer-reviewed journal that aims to foster communication between experimental and theoretical work on the one hand and historical, conceptual and interdisciplinary writings across the whole range of the biological and human sciences on the other.
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