116 research outputs found
The Effect of Prescription Drugs and Alcohol Consumption on Intimate Partner Violence Victim Blaming
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is a public health problem with harsh consequences for
women’s well-being. Social attitudes towards victims of IPV have a big impact on the perpetuation of
this phenomenon. Moreover, specific problems such as the abuse of alcohol and drugs by IPV victims
could have an effect on blame attributions towards them. The aim of this study was to evaluate
whether the external perception (Study 1) and self-perception (Study 2) of blame were influenced
by the victims’ use and abuse of alcohol or by the victims’ use of psychotropic prescription drugs.
Results of the first study (N = 136 participants) showed a significantly higher blame attribution
towards female victims with alcohol abuse compared to those without it. No significant differences
were found on blame attributed to those with psychotropic prescription drugs abuse and the control
group. Results of the second study (N = 195 female victims of interpersonal violence) showed that
alcohol consumption is associated with higher self-blame and self-blame cognitions among IPV
victims. However, results did not show significant differences on self-blame associated to the victims’
use of psychotropic prescription drugs. Our findings indicate that alcohol consumption, but not
prescription drugs use, plays a relevant role in the attribution of blame by general population and
self-blame by victims of IPV.SPANISH MINISTRY OF ECONOMY, INDUSTRY AND COMPETITIVENESS
PSI2017-84703-RLOYOLA UNIVERSIT
Assessing Police Attitudes Toward Intervention in Gender Violence: the Role of Training, Perceived Severity, and Myths About Intimate Partner Violence Against Women
Purpose Even though evidence has broadly confirmed that public attitudes toward intervention shape the decision-making process when dealing with IPVAW events, rather less is known about what determines the police decision-making process. Research support that police attitudes toward intervention in IPVAW explain differences when police officers response to IPVAW events. This research analyzes the combined role of IPVAW myths, perceived severity, and IPVAW training in reactive (tolerance for IPVAW and minimal police involvement) and proactive (important police task and pro-arrest) police attitudes toward intervention in gender violence. Methods Drawing from snowball sampling, we collected responses of 211 Spanish police officers via online subject-recruitment platform. Results The main findings of our study confirmed that IPVAW myths lead to less proactive attitudes toward intervention both directly and through a reduction in the perceived severity of IPVAW. Importantly, we found a moderating role of IPVAW training, suggesting that the endorsement of IPVAW myths leads to less proactive responses, but only for untrained police officers. Conclusions Our findings suggest the importance of IPVAW training on police proactive attitudes toward intervention via IPVAW myths instead of perceived severity. Police training programs to both novice and experienced officers should be focused on confronting IPVAW myths in order to improve police perception, evaluation and involvement in gender violence events.Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature
Objectification in Heterosexual Romantic Relationships: Examining Relationship Satisfaction of Female Objectification Recipients and Male Objectifying Perpetrators
Sexual objectification is one of most the common manifestations of discrimination against women in Western societies; however, few studies have examined objectification in the context of romantic relationships. The primary aim of the present research was to bring the study of objectification phenomena into the setting of heterosexual romantic relationships. The present set of studies examined the relation between sexual objectification and relationship satisfaction for both the sexual objectification recipient (Study 1) and the sexual objectification perpetrator (Study 2). The results of the first study with 206 U.S. undergraduate female students in committed romantic relationships replicated a previously identified negative association between feeling dehumanized by one’s partner and intimate relationship satisfaction. Moreover, this link was mediated by greater body dissatisfaction and decreased sexual satisfaction. The second study with 94 U.S. undergraduate male students in committed romantic relationships demonstrated a negative association between sexual objectification perpetration and relationship satisfaction. Furthermore, this negative relation was mediated by greater partner objectification and lower sexual satisfaction. Results of both studies demonstrated the effect of sexual objectification (as recipient or perpetrator) on global intimate relationship health. Additionally, the results highlight poor sexual satisfaction as a key dyadic mechanism linking objectification processes to intimate relationship outcomes
Self‑Objectification During the Perinatal Period: The Role of Body Surveillance in Maternal and Infant Wellbeing
Pregnancy represents a unique time during which women’s bodies undergo significant physical changes (e.g., expanding belly, larger breasts, weight gain) that can elicit increased objectification. Experiences of objectification set the stage for women to view themselves as sexual objects (i.e., self-objectification) and are associated with adverse mental health outcomes. Although women may experience heightened self-objectification and behavioral consequences (such as body surveillance) due to the objectification of pregnant bodies in Western cultures, there are remarkably few studies examining objectification theory among women during the perinatal period. The present study investigated the impact of body surveillance, a consequence of self-objectification, on maternal mental health, mother-infant bonding, and infant socioemotional outcomes in a sample of 159 women navigating pregnancy and postpartum. Utilizing a serial mediation model, we found that mothers who endorsed higher levels of body surveillance during pregnancy reported more depressive symptoms and body dissatisfaction, which were associated with greater impairments in mother-infant bonding following childbirth and more infant socioemotional dysfunction at 1-year postpartum. Maternal prenatal depressive symptoms emerged as a unique mechanism through which body surveillance predicted bonding impairments and subsequent infant outcomes. Results highlight the critical need for early intervention efforts that not only target general depression, but also promote body functionality and acceptance over the Western “thin ideal” of attractiveness among expecting mothers
The Detrimental Effect of Sexual Objectification on Targets’ and Perpetrators’ Sexual Satisfaction: The Mediating Role of Sexual Coercion
Sexual objectification is a variable to consider for understanding the sexual violence that takes place into intimate context. The set of studies presented here aims to connect sexual objectification phenomena with sexual coercion and explore the consequences that both have on sexual satisfaction. Two studies examined the association between sexual objectification and sexual satisfaction for both views: female target (Study 1) and male perpetrator (Study 2) perspectives. The results of the first study (n = 138 heterosexual women) demonstrated that perceiving partner objectification (but not reporting general sexual objectification victimization) is indirectly linked to a lower sexual satisfaction because of lower rejection and higher sexual coercion rates. The second study (n = 136 heterosexual men) showed the indirect effect of partner objectification and general sexual objectification perpetration on sexual satisfaction after sexual coercion perpetration. Results of both studies demonstrated the negative consequences that sexual objectification has on sexual satisfaction for both male perpetrators and female targets.This research was made possible, thanks to the financing
provided by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and
Competitiveness for the R&D project “New forms of Gender
Violence: Risks and protective factors for psychosocial wellbeing
[PSI2017-84703-R (MINECO/AEI/FEDER/UE)].
The Effect of Prescription Drugs and Alcohol Consumption on Intimate Partner Violence Victim Blaming
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is a public health problem with harsh consequences for
women’s well-being. Social attitudes towards victims of IPV have a big impact on the perpetuation of
this phenomenon. Moreover, specific problems such as the abuse of alcohol and drugs by IPV victims
could have an effect on blame attributions towards them. The aim of this study was to evaluate
whether the external perception (Study 1) and self-perception (Study 2) of blame were influenced
by the victims’ use and abuse of alcohol or by the victims’ use of psychotropic prescription drugs.
Results of the first study (N = 136 participants) showed a significantly higher blame attribution
towards female victims with alcohol abuse compared to those without it. No significant differences
were found on blame attributed to those with psychotropic prescription drugs abuse and the control
group. Results of the second study (N = 195 female victims of interpersonal violence) showed that
alcohol consumption is associated with higher self-blame and self-blame cognitions among IPV
victims. However, results did not show significant differences on self-blame associated to the victims’
use of psychotropic prescription drugs. Our findings indicate that alcohol consumption, but not
prescription drugs use, plays a relevant role in the attribution of blame by general population and
self-blame by victims of IPV
Extinction risk of threatened and non-threatened mosses: Reproductive and ecological patterns
For the conservation of species, it is crucial to predict extinction risk by discerning drivers such as biological traits and habitat specificity within the current context of environmental change. However, we lack comprehensive studies for threatened bryophytes that include comparisons to non-threatened ones. We aim to fill this gap and to detect biological traits related to extinction risk that provide new insights to develop conservation strategies for bryophytes. We analyzed the mosses of Spain (n = 771) categorized into two groups (threatened and non-threatened) based on the IUCN Red List categories and considered seven variables related to reproduction and habitat preferences. Threatened mosses show reproductive and habitat preference patterns that differ from those of the non-threatened species. The lack of reproduction, asexual reproduction, and monoicy are more common among threatened than non-threatened mosses. Habitat specialization, acidic and humid substrates are ecological characteristics associated with threatened mosses. In contrast, sexual reproduction and dioicy are more frequent among non-threatened species. Ecological features, such as the colonization of multiple habitats and wider altitudinal ranges, are also more often associated with non-threatened mosses. Overall, we show that the extinction risk of mosses is associated with distinct reproductive traits and habitat preferences that may be related to the current context of global change and the natural rarity of some speciesThis work was partially supported by Fundación Biodiversidad from MITECO (Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica y el Reto Demográfico, Spain) through the project BRYO
An Integrated Conceptual Framework Linking Attachment Insecurity to Increased Risk for Both Enacting and Experiencing Objectification
Sexual objectification (i.e., reducing a person to their appearance, body, or sex appeal and functions) is a significant risk factor for negative health outcomes. In the present investigation, we examined multiple manifestations of objectification (i.e., objectification of others, objectification of self, and objectification by others) in an interpersonal context. We merged objectification theory with attachment theory, one of the most prominent theories of close relationships, and propose that sexual objectification can shed light on attachment processes (and vice versa). To bolster this conceptual overlap, we tested this novel, integrated framework across two independent samples of women and men including (a) a sample of 813 undergraduate students—both partnered and single—who completed self-report questionnaires of attachment security and multiple forms of objectification and (b) a sample of 159 committed couples navigating pregnancy who were observed during naturalistic interactions to assess attachment security and completed self-report questionnaires of attachment security and objectification (including partner objectification). Results from both studies demonstrate the utility of our proposed conceptual framework linking attachment insecurity to increased risk for both enacting and experiencing objectification. The most compelling evidence emerged for (a) a link between attachment anxiety and self-objectification with moderate effect sizes across both samples, and (b) an association between a less secure base within the couple relationship during pregnancy and feeling more objectified by one’s partner as well as less humanized (i.e., feeling that your partner values you more for your physical attributes and less for your non-physical attributes)
First Report of Cucurbit chlorotic yellows virus Infecting Cucumber and Zucchini in Algeria
This work was supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades, cofunded with FEDER funds (project nos. AGL2017-85563-C2-1-R and RTA2017-00061-0O3-03 [INIA]) and the programa para grupos de investigacion de excelencia from the Conselleria d'Educacio, Investigacio, Cultura i Esport, (Generalitat Valenciana) (Prometeo Program 2017/078). A. Kheireddine thanks the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union for her mobility project (KA107 2018-20). C. Saez is a recipient of a predoctoral fellowship from Generalitat Valenciana, cofunded by the Operational Program of the European Social Fund (FSECV 2014-2020) (grant no. ACIF/2016/188). Plant Dis. 104: 1264, 2020; published online as https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-10-19-2091PDN.Accepted for publication 19 December 2019.Kheireddine, A.; Sáez-Sánchez, C.; Sifres Cuerda, AG.; Picó Sirvent, MB.; López Del Rincón, C. (2020). First Report of Cucurbit chlorotic yellows virus Infecting Cucumber and Zucchini in Algeria. Plant Disease. 104(4):1264-1264. https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-10-19-2091-PDNS12641264104
- …