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Journal Article

Citation

Parrott DJ, Swartout KM, Tharp AT, Purvis DM, Topalli V. Sex. Abuse 2019; ePub(ePub): 1079063218821121.

Affiliation

Georgia State University, Atlanta, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1079063218821121

PMID

30623745

Abstract

This study evaluated a mechanism by which men's self-efficacy to intervene increases their likelihood of preventing a laboratory analogue of sexual aggression (SA) via specific verbalizations and whether alcohol inhibits this mechanism. A sample of 78 male peer dyads were randomly assigned to consume an alcoholic or nonalcoholic beverage and complete a laboratory paradigm to assess bystander intervention to prevent SA toward a female who had ostensibly consumed an alcoholic or nonalcoholic beverage. Participants' verbalizations during the task were subjected to quantitative analysis. Regardless of alcohol use, bystander self-efficacy increased the likelihood of successful bystander intervention via participants' use of more prosocial verbalizations.

FINDINGS highlight prosocial verbalizations within the male peer context that may effectively prevent SA.


Language: en

Keywords

alcohol; peer norms; sexual violence prevention; social influence

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