生理性别,性角色取向,男性性角色压力,伪装和自我报告的恐惧

Willem A Arrindell , Annemarie M Kolk , Mary J Pickersgill , Willem J.J.M Hageman
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引用次数: 50

摘要

鉴于元分析结果显示,在多维自我报告的恐惧测量中,女性通常比男性更害怕,我们进行了一项实证尝试,以检验这一结果是否可以用性别角色取向和男性性别角色压力等心理因素来解释。此外,掩饰倾向与自我报告的恐惧与生理性别、性别角色和男性性别角色压力有关的研究结果也得到了解决。对来自英国的非临床志愿者样本进行了简单的相关性分析,结果发现,即使在男性气质和男性性角色压力的综合影响不变的情况下,女性在社交、广场恐惧症、无害动物、性和攻击性场景恐惧方面比男性更害怕。身体伤害、死亡和疾病恐惧的性别差异只有在调整了男性气质和男性角色压力的共同影响后才显现出来。采用带交互项的层次多元回归分析,发现(a)在考虑了男性气质(M)、女性气质(F)、男性性角色压力(MGRS)、伪装(Lie)和其他潜在混杂因素的共同影响后,生理性别显著地增加了社会、广场恐惧、无害动物、性和攻击性场景恐惧得分的方差比例;(b)在对同一组潜在混杂因素(包括M、F、MGRS和Lie分数)的影响进行同步调整后,生理性别成为所有五种恐惧类型的一致预测因子,正如假设的那样,女性预测高恐惧分数;(c)同样适用于男性性别角色压力的预测能力(现在包括生理性别作为协变量),正如预测的那样,压力越大,恐惧水平越高;(d)再一次,考虑到潜在的混杂因素,男性气质预测了所有类型的恐惧,除了对性和攻击性场景的恐惧,正如预期的那样,高男性气质预测低水平的恐惧,然而,与预期相反,女性气质和伪装不能成功预测任何类型的恐惧分数;(e)在调整潜在混杂因素后,很少有自变量组合(包括生理性别、M、F、MGRS和Lie)能显著预测恐惧得分,显著预测因子是MGRS ×生理性别(与社会恐惧有关)、Lie ×生理性别(对身体伤害、死亡和疾病的恐惧)和M × F(对无害动物的恐惧),其βs分别为−。. 14, .17和.22(。01≤p≤0.05);(f)虽然生理性别、男性气质和男性角色压力都是预测自我报告恐惧程度的因素,但它们的相对贡献因恐惧维度而异。关于性别角色与身心健康之间的关系,文献中提出了五种主要假说:传统假说、雌雄同体的平衡理论、雌雄同体的主要效应假说、雌雄同体的涌现特性理论和男性化假说(参见K. Davidson-Katz(1991))。性别角色与健康。C. R. Snyder &;dr . Forsyth(编辑),社会和临床心理学手册:健康的观点。纽约:佩加蒙)。目前的研究结果仅在五个恐惧维度中的四个维度上支持男性气质理论(除了性和攻击性场景部分)。讨论了研究结果的意义和对新的研究方向的建议。
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Biological sex, sex role orientation, masculine sex role stress, dissimulation and self-reported fears

Given meta-analytic findings showing females to be generally more fearful than males on multi-dimensional self-report measures of fear, an empirical attempt was made to examine whether this outcome could be explained by psychological factors such as sex role orientation and masculine sex role stress. In addition, the bearing of dissimulation tendencies on findings relating self-reported fears to biological sex, sex roles, and masculine sex role stress was also addressed. Using a non-clinical sample of volunteers from Britain, it was observed with simple correlational analyses that females were more fearful than males on Social, Agoraphobic, Harmless animals and Sexual and aggressive scenes fears, even after holding constant the combined influences of Masculinity and Masculine sex role stress. The sex difference in Bodily injury, death and illness fears emerged only after adjusting for the joint influences of Masculinity and Masculine sex role stress. Applying hierarchical multiple regression analysis with interaction terms, it was found that (a) Biological sex contributed significantly in increasing the proportion of variance accounted for in scores on Social, Agoraphobic, Harmless animals and Sexual and aggressive scenes fears, after accounting for the joint influences of Masculinity (M), Femininity (F), Masculine sex role stress (MGRS), Dissimulation (Lie) and other potentially confounding factors; (b) following the simultaneous adjustment for the influences of the same set of potentially confounding factors (thus including M, F, MGRS, and Lie scores), Biological sex emerged as a consistent predictor of all five types of fears considered, with, as hypothesized, being female predicting high fear scores; (c) the same applied to the predictive ability of Masculine sex role stress (with Biological sex now included as a covariate), with, as predicted, higher stress being predictive of higher fear levels; (d) again, taking into account potentially confounding factors, Masculinity predicted all types of fears considered, except Fears of sexual and aggressive scenes, with, as anticipated, high Masculinity predicting low levels of fear, whereas, contrary to expectations, Femininity and Dissimulation did not succeed in predicting fear scores of any type; (e) few combinations of independent variables (involving Biological sex, M, F, MGRS and Lie) predicted fear scores significantly following adjustment for potential confounds, the significant predictors being MGRS × Biological sex (in relation to Social fears), Lie × Biological sex (Fears of bodily injury, death and illness) and M × F (Harmless animals fears) with respective βs of −.14, .17 and .22 (.01 ⩽ P ⩽ .05); (f) while Biological sex, Masculinity and Masculine sex role stress were all factors predicting the magnitude of self-reported fears, their relative contributions varied according to the fear dimension. Five major hypotheses about the relationship between sex roles and mental and physical health have been advanced in the literature: the traditional hypothesis, the balance theory of androgyny, the main effects androgyny hypothesis, the emergent properties theory of androgyny, and the Masculinity hypothesis (cf. K. Davidson-Katz (1991). Gender roles and health. In C. R. Snyder & D. R. Forsyth (Eds.), Handbook of Social and Clinical Psychology: The Health Perspective. New York: Pergamon). The present findings supported only the Masculinity theory across four out of five fear dimensions (all but the Sexual and aggressive scenes component). The implications of the findings and suggestions for new research directions are discussed.

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