(Press-News.org) He loves her, he loves her not.
A new study led by Joshua Hart, assistant professor of psychology, suggests that men's insecurities about relationships and conflicted views of women as romantic partners and rivals could lead some to adopt sexist attitudes about women.
The study was recently published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, a peer-reviewed journal.
Hart and his co-authors, Jacqueline Hung '11, a former student of Hart's, and psychology professors Peter Glick of Lawrence University and Rachel Dinero of Cazenovia College, surveyed more than 400 heterosexual men to gauge their responses to questions about their attachment style, hostile and benevolent sexism, and views on romance.
Attachment style refers to the way people relate to others in the context of intimate relationships, defined by two personality traits: attachment anxiety and attachment avoidance. Both traits reflect different kinds of relationship insecurities; people who are low in both traits are considered secure.
Hostile sexism depicts women as mean-spirited foes who aim to dominate men. Benevolent sexism regards them as objects of adoration and affection, but also fragile and needy of chivalrous treatment.
Previous research has found that some men view women as offering the possibility of romantic fulfillment, but also competing with them in areas such as the workplace, where both vie for similar resources.
Hart's study found that anxiously attached men tend to be ambivalent sexists—both hostile and benevolent—whereas avoidantly attached men typically endorse hostile sexism, while rejecting benevolent sexism.
"In other words, anxious men are likely to alternate between chivalry and hostility toward female partners, acting like a knight in shining armor when she fulfills his goals and ideals about women, but like an ogre when she doesn't," Hart explained this month to the Society of Personality and Social Psychology's web-based news site, Connections. "Avoidant men are likely to show only hostility without any princely protectiveness."
The survey results also showed that anxiously attached men tend to be romantics at heart who adopt benevolently sexist beliefs, while avoidantly attached men lean toward social dominance. That, in turn, leads them to embrace hostile sexism.
The findings highlight how personality traits could predispose men to be sexists, according to Hart. This information could help couples build stronger relationships, particularly during therapy.
###
For the full study in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, click here. To read Hart's summary for the Society of Personality and Social Psychology, click here.
Delusions of gender: Men's insecurities may lead to sexist views of women
He loves her, he loves her not: Attachment style as a persoanlity antecedent to men's ambivalent sexism
2012-12-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Young offenders who work, don't attend school may be more antisocial
2012-12-20
Many high school students work in addition to going to school, and some argue that employment is good for at-risk youths. But a new study has found that placing juvenile offenders in jobs without ensuring that they attend school may make them more antisocial.
The study, by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh, Temple University, and the University of California, Irvine, appears in the journal Child Development.
While evidence suggests that working long hours during the school year has negative effects on adolescent antisocial behavior among middle- and upper-income ...
Topics of teen sibling fights affect anxiety, depression, self-esteem
2012-12-20
Fights between siblings about simple things, like whose turn it is to empty the dishwasher, aren't harmless. Rather, such fights are about equality and fairness, and they can lead to depression, according to a new study.
The longitudinal research, by researchers at the University of Missouri, appears in the journal Child Development.
Although teen siblings fight about a lot of different issues, many of their fights can be categorized as being about equality and fairness (for example, whose turn it is to empty the dishwasher) or invasion of personal space (for example, ...
Supportive role models, coping lead to better health in poor teens
2012-12-20
Low-income teenagers who have supportive role models and engage in adaptive strategies have lower levels of a marker for cardiovascular risk than low-income teens without such resources, according to a new study.
The study, by researchers at Northwestern University and the University of British Columbia, is published in the journal Child Development.
"Low socioeconomic status is one of the strongest determinants of chronic disease in developed countries," notes Edith Chen, professor of psychology and faculty fellow at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern ...
Motivation, study habits -- not IQ -- determine growth in math achievement
2012-12-20
It's not how smart students are but how motivated they are and how they study that determines their growth in math achievement. That's the main finding of a new study that appears in the journal Child Development.
The study was conducted by researchers at the University of Munich and the University of Bielefeld.
"While intelligence as assessed by IQ tests is important in the early stages of developing mathematical competence, motivation and study skills play a more important role in students' subsequent growth," according to Kou Murayama, postdoctoral researcher of ...
Toddlers' language skills predict less anger by preschool
2012-12-20
Toddlers with more developed language skills are better able to manage frustration and less likely to express anger by the time they're in preschool. That's the conclusion of a new longitudinal study from researchers at the Pennsylvania State University that appears in the journal Child Development.
"This is the first longitudinal evidence of early language abilities predicting later aspects of anger regulation," according to Pamela M. Cole, liberal arts research professor of psychology and human development and family studies at Pennsylvania State University, who was ...
Neuroscience: The extraordinary ease of ordinal series
2012-12-20
Familiar categories whose members appear in orderly sequences are processed differently than others in the brain, according to new research published by David Eagleman in the open access journal Frontiers in Neuroscience on December 20th, 2012. The study suggests that ordinal sequences have a strong spatial quality and activate a region of the brain not thought to be directly involved in language acquisition and production. Also, sequences shown in the correct order stimulated less brain activity in comparison to sequences that were not in the correct order, implying that ...
USDA explores using novel genetic labs for faster detection of E. coli
2012-12-20
Pina Fratamico is on the quest to find the easiest and fastest way to test for harmful Escherichia coli in ground beef. In an article published in Frontiers in Microbiology on the 20th of December, she explores using a next-generation real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) system to discover specific gene targets that indicate the presence of dangerous foodborne pathogens. The results show that assays performed using this PCR system are rapid, sensitive, and reliable.
"Testing using these types of systems is faster, easier, and more reproducible than previous methods, ...
Removing protein 'garbage' in nerve cells may help control 2 neurodegenerative diseases
2012-12-20
WASHINGTON — Neuroscientists at Georgetown University Medical Center say they have new evidence that challenges scientific dogma involving two fatal neurodegenerative diseases — amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) — and, in the process, have uncovered a possible therapeutic target as a novel strategy to treat both disorders.
The study, posted online today in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, found that the issue in both diseases is the inability of the cell's protein garbage disposal system to "pull out" and destroy TDP-43, a powerful, ...
Sibling squabbles can lead to depression, anxiety
2012-12-20
Holiday presents will soon be under the tree for millions of adolescents. With those gifts may come sibling squabbles over violations of personal space, such as unwanted borrowing of a fashionable clothing item, or arguments over fairness, such as whose turn it is to play a new video game. Those squabbles represent two specific types of sibling conflict that can have different effects on a youth's emotional health, according to a multi-year study by a University of Missouri psychologist. With these findings, parents can learn how to bring peace to the home and encourage ...
Temple researcher shows diabetes, blood pressure link to colon cancer recurrence, survival
2012-12-20
(Philadelphia, PA) – By all accounts, a combination of colon cancer, diabetes and high blood pressure can be a recipe for medical disaster. Now, a new study led by a surgical oncologist and researcher at Temple University School of Medicine and Fox Chase Cancer Center has shown just how deadly this mix can be. In a retrospective analysis of more than 36,000 patients with colon cancer, investigators showed that those with early stage disease and diabetes or high blood pressure – two components of metabolic syndrome – have a greater risk for the cancer returning after treatment ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Visionary psychedelic researcher reshapes treatment landscape for psychiatric disorders
Stanford researcher decodes sugar molecules' role in brain aging protection
Italian neuroscientist links childhood trauma to lifelong brain consequences
Personality disorder pioneer reveals half-century journey transforming psychiatric classification
Why regulating stem cell–based embryo model research is important (yet controversial)
An Alaskan volcano could help scientists understand why ‘stealthy’ volcanoes erupt without warning
Drive an electric motor without metal! KIST develops CNT-based ultra-lightweight coil technology
Cracking the spatial code: A new chapter in bone and muscle research
New oil and gas fields incompatible with Paris climate goals
Smartphone tests could accelerate drug development for Huntington’s disease
Significant gaps in testing for genetic cancer risk, study finds
Payment source shift for surgical care among veterans enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans
Study reveals how fatal school shootings disrupt local economies
American Psychological Association 2025 Convention, Aug. 7-9, Denver
Appendix cancer incidence has quadrupled in older millennials
Even bumble bee queens need personal days, too
Carbon capture method mines cement ingredients from the air
Fostering Integration: SELINA’s 5th project Workshop on the Azores unites partners to strengthen collaboration
Reelin marks cocaine-activated brain neurons and regulates cocaine reward
Creatine is safe, effective and important for everyone, longtime researcher says
Robots made of linked particle chains
Research alert: laying the groundwork for potential age-related macular degeneration therapies
It’s not the game, it’s the group: Sports fans connect the most over rituals
AI identifies key gene sets that cause complex diseases
Virginia Tech study sheds light on solar farm impacts to property values
Study defines key driver of aggressive ovarian cancer
Rings of time: unearthing climate secrets from ancient trees
Medical AI systems failing to disclose inaccurate race, ethnicity information
Light and AI drive precise motion in soft robotic arm developed at Rice
Vital connections between journalists and whistleblowers under increasing pressure
[Press-News.org] Delusions of gender: Men's insecurities may lead to sexist views of womenHe loves her, he loves her not: Attachment style as a persoanlity antecedent to men's ambivalent sexism