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    Women’s preference for masculine traits is disrupted by images of male-on-female violence : [data]

    Li, Yaoran
    Winegard, Benjamin
    Puts, David A.
    Welling, Lisa L. M.
    Geary, David C.
    Bailey, Drew H.
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    Main Study Face Data (385.7Kb)
    Main Study Voice Data (44.45Kb)
    Raw Data Supplementary Study Masculinity Discrimination (235.6Kb)
    Raw Data Supplementary Study Working Memory and Face and Voice (97.39Kb)
    Date
    2014
    Format
    Dataset
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Women's preferences for men's masculinized faces and voices were assessed after women (n = 331) were primed with images of male-on-male aggression, male-on-female aggression, pathogens, and neutral scenes. Male-on-male aggression and pathogen primes were associated with increased preference for masculine traits, but the same effect emerged in the neutral condition. We show the increased preference for masculine traits was due to repeated exposure to these traits, not the priming images themselves. Images of male-on-female aggression were an exception; these elicited feelings of disgust and anger appeared to disrupt the preference for masculinized traits. The results suggest women process men's facial and vocal traits as signals of aggressive potential and lose any preference for these traits with cues indicating men might direct this aggression toward them.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10355/43638
    Part of
    Psychological Sciences publications and presentations
    Citation of related article: Li Y, Bailey DH, Winegard B, Puts DA, Welling LLM, Geary DC (2014) Women’s Preference for Masculine Traits Is Disrupted by Images of Male-on-Female Aggression. PLoS ONE 9(10): e110497. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110497
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    • Psychological Sciences publications and presentations (MU)

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