Paper
Extracting implicit theories about the risk of coercive control in romantic relationships
Published Dec 1, 2001 · Margo I. Wilson, Vessna Jocic, M. Daly
Personal Relationships
7
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Influential Citations
Abstract
People readily make attributions about the likely behavior of others, based on very limited information. We exploited this tendency to assess people's sensitivity to personological and social-circumstantial evidence of risk of coercive control in romantic relationships, by unobtrusively varying information about a fictitious couple in a between-groups design and asking viewers to make predictions about the feelings and behavior of the three characters–a man, his girlfriend, and his sister. Key features of the story were systematically altered to elicit attributions of the man's aggressive and jealous inclinations to see if people are sensitive to the psychological link between sexually proprietary inclinations and risk of violence. The story manipulations were effective in eliciting attributions of the man's aggressive inclinations, of the woman's polyandrous inclinations, and of the man's likely jealousy. As expected, people predicted that an aggressive and jealous man would be likely to use violence and other controlling actions against his girlfriend.
People are sensitive to the psychological link between sexually proprietary inclinations and the risk of violence in romantic relationships, making predictions about the likely behavior of an aggressive and jealous man.
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