Abstract
Sexual objectification is very common in modern Western societies, especially toward women. Previous research has suggested that in Western cultures, social power could lead to objectification. Specifically, power activates an approaching tendency toward useful targets, in turn leading to instrumental objectification and sexual objectification of targets. However, previous research has mostly focused on Western cultures, and the neural correlates underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. To examine whether the effects of power can be generalized to Chinese cultural contexts and how power promotes the objectification of sexualized bodies, we conducted two studies using Chinese samples. In Study 1, we replicated the behavioral effects of social power on sexual objectification. Specifically, we found that power increased sexual objectification toward sexualized female rather than male bodies. In Study 2, we examined the absence of an N170 amplitude inversion effect as a possible neural correlate of sexual objectification and replicated the effects of power on sexual objectification through event-related potentials (ERPs). For participants in a high-power group, the N170 amplitude inversion effect emerged when processing sexualized male bodies (less sexual objectification) but not female bodies (more sexual objectification); this effect was not seen for those participants in a low-power group. Our findings provide behavioral and neural data that power leads to increased sexual objectification toward sexualized women in Chinese participants.
Highlights
There is currently a trend in Western culture for women to be depicted in an objectified manner in both social interactions and mass media presentations
This finding is consistent with previous findings that suggested that power facilitates objectification (Gruenfeld et al, 2008) and sexual objectification (Civile and Obhi, 2016; Civile et al, 2016)
We examined whether social power leads to increased sexual objectification using behavioral and event-related potentials (ERPs) designs in Chinese samples
Summary
There is currently a trend in Western culture for women to be depicted in an objectified manner in both social interactions and mass media presentations. Women report being gazed at by others more than men do during social interactions, and women in visual media are usually depicted with an emphasis on the body and body parts, while men are portrayed with an emphasis on the head and face (Fredrickson and Roberts, 1997) These findings suggest the existence of sexual objectification. Sexual objectification is a common occurrence in daily life, arising in various forms of media and interpersonal encounters It can present as indirect body monitoring or in direct forms, such as rape and sexual harassment (Fredrickson and Roberts, 1997)
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