The Rise of Spanking, Hitting, and Strangulation: A Longitudinal Evaluation of Aggression in Pornography
ABSTRACT Over the last two decades, a large body of literature has concluded that viewing pornography that features aggression is associated with attitudes that endorse aggression and with sexually aggressive behaviors. Yet, previous content analyses of pornography have produced substantial variability in reported rates of aggression. Furthermore, these analyses did not include data from the last decade and most of them failed to examine time trends in pornographic representations of aggression. We examined a sample of 255 popular online pornographic videos from Pornhub, over a period of 25 years, from 2000 to 2024. While any visible physical aggression appeared in 43.9% of the videos in the entire sample, nonconsensual aggression was rare. Moreover, depictions of aggression in the most viewed videos have not been stable over time, with rates of aggression nearly tripling between the first and last decades of the analysis. While this growth is primarily the result of increases in spanking, we also found significant increases in hitting and choking practices. We discuss the potential consequences of these increases, as well as possible policy and educational implications.
- Research Article
4
- 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2021.105104
- Feb 16, 2022
- Hormones and Behavior
Mismatches in resident and stranger serotonin transporter genotypes lead to escalated aggression, and the target for aggression is mediated by sex differences in male and female rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta)
- Research Article
32
- 10.1002/1098-2337(1992)18:3<231::aid-ab2480180306>3.0.co;2-7
- Jan 1, 1992
- Aggressive Behavior
Eleven green monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) were combined into three social groups (two heterosexual, one all-male) in enclosures with similar volume but different levels of environmental complexity (two or four compartments). Agonistic and affiliative interactions were recorded over a 21-week period. The two heterosexual groups had their environmental complexity reduced (number of compartments reduced by one-half and volume/floorspace reduced by one-third) for a 5-week period in the middle of the study. Rates of contact aggression were low throughout the study. In the group with complexity reduced to one compartment, rates of noncontact aggression and affiliative behavior increased, and remained high after complexity was restored. In the group reduced to two compartments, rates of affiliative behavior increased but rates of noncontact aggression decreased, trends which continued after complexity was restored. The all-male group exhibited low rates of affiliative behavior throughout. Two compartments appear to foster successful group formation, but any change in a group's enclosure can have long-term effects on rates of aggression. © 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Research Article
51
- 10.1176/ps.2006.57.7.1022
- Jul 1, 2006
- Psychiatric Services
Reports of violence and injuries to staff and patients in acute psychiatric inpatient settings have led to the development and implementation of training courses in the Prevention and Management of Violence and Aggression (PMVA). The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between PMVA training of acute psychiatric ward nursing staff and officially reported violent incident rates. A retrospective analysis was conducted of training records (312 course attendances) and violent incident rates (684 incidents) over two-and-a-half years on 14 acute admission psychiatric wards (5,384 admissions) at three inner-city hospitals in the United Kingdom as part of the Tompkins Acute Ward Study. A positive association was found between training and rates of violent incidents. There was weak evidence that increased rates of aggressive incidents prompted course attendance, no evidence that course attendance reduced violence, and some evidence that attendance of briefer update courses triggered small short-term rises in rates of physical aggression. Course attendance was associated with a rise in physical and verbal aggression while staff were away from the ward. The failure to find a drop in incident rates after training, coupled with the small increases in incidents detected, raises concerns about the training course's efficacy as a preventive strategy. Alternatively, the results are consistent with a threshold effect, indicating that once adequate numbers of staff have been trained, further training keeps incidents at a low rate.
- Research Article
34
- 10.1002/gps.1293
- Apr 25, 2005
- International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
To assess the prevalence of physical aggression against caregivers by Alzheimer's patients. One hundred and ninety-eight individuals with dementia, primarily Alzheimer's disease (AD) were evaluated with the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory, the Mini Mental Status Examination, two measures of Activities of Daily Living, portions of the Conflict Tactics Scale to measure physical aggression against partner, questions about conduct problems during childhood/adolescence of the patients, and chart records of delusion and paranoia. 25% of the patients engaged in physical aggression against their caregivers in the past year, and 33% of the patients engaged in some act of physical aggression against any individual in the past two weeks. Physical aggression against a caregiver was more likely in the middle (34%) than the early stage of AD (4%). Physical aggression against a partner and agitation were more likely if the patient had a history of symptoms of conduct disorder. Delusions and paranoia were both associated with general physical aggression and general verbal aggression but not physical aggression against a caretaker. 25% of Alzheimer's disease and Multi-Infarct dementia patients engaged in acts of physical aggression against their caregivers. The rate of aggression seen in this clinical sample was much higher than the rate of physical aggression in a community sample of the elderly.
- Research Article
23
- 10.1007/s00040-008-1027-0
- Sep 23, 2008
- Insectes Sociaux
Social insects are premier models for studying the evolution of self-organization in animal societies. Primitively social species may be informative about the early stages of social evolution and transitions in self-organization. Previous worker removal studies in Polistes instabilis paper wasps suggested that dominant but non-egglaying workers play an important role in regulating rates of task performance by inducing foraging in subordinates. We extend previous worker removal studies by quantifying changes in individuals’ behavior following removals, and by measuring associations between behavioral change and individuals’ reproductive capacity (ovary development). Workers changed their rates of aggressive behaviors more than queens following the dominant worker removals. Increases in worker’s rates of aggressive behaviors were correlated with decreases in their foraging rates. Changes in individual rates of social aggression were associated with their reproductive capacity: worker females with well-developed ovaries increased their rates of aggression. Further changes in rates of aggression after the dominant workers were returned also depended on ovary development. These patterns suggest that task performance and potential fecundity are linked in workers, and that worker interactions play a strong role in regulating task performance. We conclude that worker reproductive competition may have influenced the evolution of colony organization in social insects.
- Research Article
148
- 10.1006/hbeh.2002.1804
- Aug 1, 2002
- Hormones and Behavior
Endocrine Correlates of Rank, Reproduction, and Female-Directed Aggression in Male Japanese Macaques ( Macaca fuscata)
- Research Article
21
- 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2004.05.005
- Jul 25, 2004
- Hormones and Behavior
Social parameters and urinary testosterone level in male chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes)
- Research Article
240
- 10.1007/s10329-005-0140-1
- Aug 20, 2005
- Primates
This paper tests the proposal that chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and humans have similar rates of death from intraspecific aggression, whereas chimpanzees have higher rates of non-lethal physical attack (Boehm 1999, Hierarchy in the forest: the evolution of egalitarian behavior. Harvard University Press). First, we assembled data on lethal aggression from long-term studies of nine communities of chimpanzees living in five populations. We calculated rates of death from intraspecific aggression both within and between communities. Variation among communities in mortality rates from aggression was high, and rates of death from intercommunity and intracommunity aggression were not correlated. Estimates for average rates of lethal violence for chimpanzees proved to be similar to average rates for subsistence societies of hunter-gatherers and farmers. Second, we compared rates of non-lethal physical aggression for two populations of chimpanzees and one population of recently settled hunter-gatherers. Chimpanzees had rates of aggression between two and three orders of magnitude higher than humans. These preliminary data support Boehm's hypothesis.
- Research Article
1
- 10.2466/pr0.1983.53.1.275
- Aug 1, 1983
- Psychological Reports
The purpose of this study was to investigate the self-perceived status of students ( N = 48) rated by their teachers as high and low in aggressive behavior on an 8-item modified version of the Devereaux School Behavior Rating Scale. In Grades 2, 3, and 4, 4 boys and 4 girls rated low in aggression and 4 boys and 4 girls rated high in aggression by their teachers were randomly selected. A significant interaction of grade by aggression indicated differences in perceived status depending on grade and teachers' ratings of aggression. Students in Grades 2 and 3 who were rated high in aggression perceived themselves as more popular, but those in Grades 4 and 5 so rated perceived themselves as less popular.
- Research Article
21
- 10.1002/ab.21704
- Mar 6, 2017
- Aggressive Behavior
Facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) is correlated with a number of aspects of aggressive behavior in men. Observers appear to be able to assess aggressiveness from male fWHR, but implications for interpersonal distance preferences have not yet been determined. This study utilized a novel computerized stop-distance task to examine interpersonal space preferences of female participants who envisioned being approached by a man; men's faces photographed posed in neutral facial expressions were shown in increasing size to mimic approach. We explored the effect of the men's fWHR, their behavioral aggression (measured previously in a computer game), and women's ratings of the men's aggressiveness, attractiveness, and masculinity on the preferred interpersonal distance of 52 German women. Hierarchical linear modelling confirmed the relationship between the fWHR and trait judgements (ratings of aggressiveness, attractiveness, and masculinity). There were effects of fWHR and actual aggression on the preferred interpersonal distance, even when controlling statistically for men's and the participants' age. Ratings of attractiveness, however, was the most influential variable predicting preferred interpersonal distance. Our results extend earlier findings on fWHR as a cue of aggressiveness in men by demonstrating implications for social interaction. In conclusion, women are able to accurately detect aggressiveness in emotionally neutral facial expressions, and adapt their social distance preferences accordingly.
- Research Article
2
- 10.5539/ass.v6n4p81
- Mar 18, 2010
- Asian Social Science
Several studies conducted on female aggression (physical and psychological) are the primary concern of the review done in this paper. This article contains three parts - the first part focuses on the findings which show that the rate of aggression for male and female are equal, while the second part focuses on the research that reveal the rate of physical aggression is higher in women than men. The third part concerns on studies which have shown higher level of psychological aggression in women compared to men. According to the existing literatures, the rate of female aggression is equal to those of men, and in some studies, the rates of physical and psychological aggression among women are found to be higher than among men. Thus, it is concluded that the rate of women aggression is not lower than men, but it is either equal to or higher than men.
- Book Chapter
- 10.4337/9781788973380.00010
- Jun 22, 2021
This chapter uses the research findings on the geography of entrepreneurial psychology to discuss implications for entrepreneurial practice, education and policy. It discusses how macro-psychological perspectives can enrich our understanding of successful entrepreneurship as real-world behavior embedded in context and space. Further implications for education are discussed, focusing on the role of relatively hard-wired psychological characteristics and their regional distribution. The chapter concludes with a discussion of concrete policy implications. Designing effective initiatives for the development of a local “entrepreneurial culture” has become a major policy target around the globe. The chapter discusses various perspective, including a potential change in local mentalities and region-specific policies that integrate the existing local culture.
- Research Article
2
- 10.3356/jrr-22-76
- May 25, 2023
- Journal of Raptor Research
In many raptor species, hatching asynchrony results in a size hierarchy among nestlings, which may facilitate brood reduction by means of sibling aggression-induced mortality, especially in times of low food resources. However, few researchers have investigated the relationships among hatching asynchrony, sibling aggression, and nestling feeding rates in raptors. We studied the influence of hatch rank, brood size, and brood age on aggression and feeding rates among Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus) nestlings in suburban southwestern Ohio. Despite relatively modest hatching asynchrony, nestling hatch rank (along with brood size and brood age) was an important predictor of the amount of aggression exhibited by individual nestlings. The oldest nestlings exhibited more aggressive behavior than younger nestlings, although they did not consume significantly more food. Aggression rates were higher in broods of three than broods of two nestlings, and aggression decreased from week 2 to week 3, post-hatching. However, hatch rank was not an important determinant of nestling food consumption, and food consumption rates were unrelated to sibling aggression rates. Identifiable prey delivered to nestling Red-shouldered Hawks was diverse and consisted of 28.3% birds, 25.7% mammals, 23.4% amphibians, 16.4% reptiles, and 6.2% invertebrates (by biomass). The relatively high percentage of birds in the diet may reflect food availability in the suburban habitat surrounding the nests. Sibling aggression did not result in direct siblicide in our study, but four nestlings apparently starved. Overall, the oldest Red-shouldered Hawk nestlings in our study established their dominance early but this was not associated with a detectable advantage in terms of food consumption.
- Research Article
5
- 10.1002/jdd.12044
- Feb 5, 2020
- Journal of Dental Education
Aggression from patients is one of the risks faced by healthcare workers during a typical work week. This risk begins during training. Although rates of patient aggression have been estimated for nursing students and medical residents, studies of aggression toward dental students have not been conducted. To begin to address this knowledge gap, we surveyed 160 D.D.S. student dentists in their third- or fourth years who were attending a large urban college of dentistry during the 2018-2019 academic year. Each class had approximately 375 students, leading to a response rate of 21%. Approximately 28% of students reported experiencing at least 1 instance of physical aggression, 86% reported experiencing at least 1 instance of verbal aggression, and 36% reported experiencing at least 1 instance of reputational aggression. There were no differences in rates of experienced aggression by age or gender, but Hispanic or Latinx students were more likely to experience physical and reputational aggression than non-Hispanic White or Asian students. We discuss implications for dental education, including modifications to training clinic procedures and curriculum additions or modifications that may help prepare students to prevent and address patient aggression within the dental clinic environment.
- Research Article
9
- 10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.105015
- Apr 13, 2020
- Children and Youth Services Review
Disrupting the disruption cycle – A longitudinal analysis of aggression trajectories, quality of life, psychopathology and self-efficacy in closed youth residential care
- Ask R Discovery
- Chat PDF
AI summaries and top papers from 250M+ research sources.