Article (Périodiques scientifiques)
The Sexualized-Body-Inversion-Hypothesis Revisited: Valid Indicator of Sexual Objectification or Methodological Artifact?
SCHMIDT, Alexander F.; Kistemaker, Lisa M.
2015In Cognition, 134 (1), p. 77-84
Peer reviewed
 

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Schmidt&Kistemaker.in press.Sexual Objectification Artifact_COGNITION.pdf
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Résumé :
[en] Recently, Bernard, Gervais, Allen, Campomizzi, and Klein (2012) reported that individuals were less able to recognize inverted vs. upright pictures of sexualized men as compared to women. Based on their formulation of the sexualized-body-inversion hypothesis (SBIH) it was concluded that sexualized women as compared to men are perceived in a more object-like manner supporting sexual objectification (SO) of females – independent from observer gender. We challenge this interpretation and hypothesize that the originally reported effect is the result of a methodological artifact due to gender-symmetry and stimuli setup-symmetry confounds in the original stimulus set. We tested this theoretically more parsimonious account in a methodologically stricter and extended conceptual replication of the putative SO-effect. Results from two studies showed that the original stimulus set indeed suffered from symmetry confounds and that these are necessary boundary-conditions in order for the hypothetical SO-effect to occur. It is concluded that the SBIH as postulated by Bernard et al. (2012) is based on a methodological artifact and cannot be related to SO but symmetry detection.
Disciplines :
Psychologie cognitive & théorique
Auteur, co-auteur :
SCHMIDT, Alexander F. ;  University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education (FLSHASE) > Integrative Research Unit: Social and Individual Development (INSIDE)
Kistemaker, Lisa M.
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
The Sexualized-Body-Inversion-Hypothesis Revisited: Valid Indicator of Sexual Objectification or Methodological Artifact?
Date de publication/diffusion :
janvier 2015
Titre du périodique :
Cognition
ISSN :
0010-0277
Maison d'édition :
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Pays-Bas
Volume/Tome :
134
Fascicule/Saison :
1
Pagination :
77-84
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Disponible sur ORBilu :
depuis le 16 septembre 2014

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