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Through Myths, Attitudes, or Norms? The Relationship Between Low Self-Control and Sexual Aggression.

Authors
  • Vazsonyi, Alexander T1
  • Karaman, Neslihan Güney2
  • Albayrak, Hüsna3
  • Liu, Dan1
  • 1 University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
  • 2 Ankara University, Ankara, Turkey. , (Turkey)
  • 3 TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Ankara, Turkey. , (Turkey)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Violence against women
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2023
Volume
29
Issue
11
Pages
2194–2215
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1177/10778012221132306
PMID: 36267000
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

This study tested the direct and indirect effects of low self-control on sexual aggression and violence, mediated through rape myth acceptance, date rape attitudes, and promiscuous sexual norms among college-aged men. Self-report data were collected from 369 male college students attending a large university in the southeastern United States. The final model with all three mediators indicated significant mediated effects through date rape attitudes as well as promiscuous sexual norms on sexual aggression; it explained 16% (Cox & Snell) and 23% (Nagelkerke) of the variance. Study findings support the importance of low self-control on sexual aggression among male college students.

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