Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment

Evolutionary psychological principles were applied to the issue of sexual harassment to investigate whether the gender, power, and mate value of harassers were related to perceptions of sexual harassment. One hundred and sixty heterosexual men and women were given descriptions of a target individual...

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Main Author: O'Connell, Michael Charles
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Psychology 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3700
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-37002015-03-30T15:30:23ZGender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual HarassmentO'Connell, Michael CharlesEvolutionary PsychologySexual HarassmentWorkplaceI/O PsychologyEvolutionary psychological principles were applied to the issue of sexual harassment to investigate whether the gender, power, and mate value of harassers were related to perceptions of sexual harassment. One hundred and sixty heterosexual men and women were given descriptions of a target individual whose mate value and power was manipulated, and three behavioural vignettes involving imagined interactions with the target individual. Participants rated their perceived level of sexual harassment (the dependent variable) stemming from the imagined interactions. Participants also provided ratings of their self perceived level of attractiveness, attitude towards social-sexual communication in the workplace, and experience with social-sexual communication in the workplace. As predicted, females perceived higher levels of sexual harassment than males, and participants perceived higher levels of sexual harassment from low mate-value target individuals than high mate-value target individuals. Against predictions, no result was found for power. Additionally, self perceived level of attractiveness was found to moderate the relationship between gender and perceived sexual harassment, and attitude towards social-sexual communication in the workplace was found to moderate the relationship between mate value and perceived sexual harassment. Implications and explanations are discussed with reference to workplace issues, and evolutionary psychology.University of Canterbury. Psychology2010-04-09T02:52:45Z2010-04-09T02:52:45Z2009Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/3700enNZCUCopyright Michael Charles O'Connellhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Evolutionary Psychology
Sexual Harassment
Workplace
I/O Psychology
spellingShingle Evolutionary Psychology
Sexual Harassment
Workplace
I/O Psychology
O'Connell, Michael Charles
Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment
description Evolutionary psychological principles were applied to the issue of sexual harassment to investigate whether the gender, power, and mate value of harassers were related to perceptions of sexual harassment. One hundred and sixty heterosexual men and women were given descriptions of a target individual whose mate value and power was manipulated, and three behavioural vignettes involving imagined interactions with the target individual. Participants rated their perceived level of sexual harassment (the dependent variable) stemming from the imagined interactions. Participants also provided ratings of their self perceived level of attractiveness, attitude towards social-sexual communication in the workplace, and experience with social-sexual communication in the workplace. As predicted, females perceived higher levels of sexual harassment than males, and participants perceived higher levels of sexual harassment from low mate-value target individuals than high mate-value target individuals. Against predictions, no result was found for power. Additionally, self perceived level of attractiveness was found to moderate the relationship between gender and perceived sexual harassment, and attitude towards social-sexual communication in the workplace was found to moderate the relationship between mate value and perceived sexual harassment. Implications and explanations are discussed with reference to workplace issues, and evolutionary psychology.
author O'Connell, Michael Charles
author_facet O'Connell, Michael Charles
author_sort O'Connell, Michael Charles
title Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment
title_short Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment
title_full Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment
title_fullStr Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment
title_full_unstemmed Gender Power and Mate Value: The Evolutionary Psychology of Sexual Harassment
title_sort gender power and mate value: the evolutionary psychology of sexual harassment
publisher University of Canterbury. Psychology
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3700
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