AI Article Synopsis

  • Sexual objectification and self-objectification negatively impact women's mental health, but their effects on emotions and behavior are not well understood.
  • A study with 36 participants revealed that women generally felt anger and disgust during objectifying interactions and were likely to punish the perpetrators in subsequent scenarios; however, self-objectification was linked to increased feelings of shame and less inclination to punish.
  • Neural responses from 32 participants indicated that these objectifying encounters affected brain activity related to processing the perpetrator, with specific brain wave patterns correlating to feelings of shame and levels of self-objectification.

Article Abstract

Sexual objectification and the interiorized objectifying gaze (self-objectification) are dangerous phenomena for women's psychological wellness. However, their specific effects on women's socio-affective reactions are still poorly understood, and their neural activity has never been explored before. In the present study, we investigated women's emotional and electrophysiological responses during simulated computer-based objectifying social interactions, and we examined consequent punishing behaviours towards the perpetrator using the ultimatum game. Behavioural results (N = 36) showed that during objectifying encounters women generally felt angrier/disgusted and tended to punish the perpetrator in later interactions. However, the more the women self-objectified, the more they felt ashamed (p = 0.011) and tended to punish the perpetrators less (p = 0.008). At a neural level (N = 32), objectifying interactions modulated female participants' neural signal elicited during the processing of the perpetrator, increasing early (N170) and later (EPN, LPP) ERP components. In addition, only the amplitude of the LPP positively correlated with shame (p = 0.006) and the level of self-objectification (p = 0.018). This finding provides first evidence for the specific time-course of sexual objectification, self-objectification and its associated shame response, and proves that emotional and social consequences of sexual objectification in women may depend on their tendency to self-objectify.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10082788PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-32379-wDOI Listing

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