Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women

Given the importance of rape myth acceptance in attitudes towards sexual violence and victims as well as the paucity of such studies in a non-western context, this study aimed to examine whether empathy and gender role attitudes interact with gender to influence rape myth acceptance in Singapore. On...

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Main Author: Ng, Li Ling
Other Authors: Khader Majeed
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76868
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-768682019-12-10T13:02:10Z Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women Ng, Li Ling Khader Majeed Olivia Choy School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Given the importance of rape myth acceptance in attitudes towards sexual violence and victims as well as the paucity of such studies in a non-western context, this study aimed to examine whether empathy and gender role attitudes interact with gender to influence rape myth acceptance in Singapore. One hundred and forty-one Singaporeans and Permanent Residents (52 males, 89 females) aged 18 to 57 years were randomly assigned to either an objective or empathy condition, in which they were instructed to either remain detached or to place themselves in the victim’s position while reading a written vignette of a rape scenario. Results showed that lower levels of empathy were not significantly associated with rape myth acceptance, and both empathy and empathy priming did not interact with gender to affect rape myth acceptance. However, consistent with past studies, male participants were found to have significantly higher rape myth acceptance and lower levels of empathy than female participants. In addition, the study found gender role attitudes to be a significant moderator of the relationship between gender and RMA. The results help provide insight into the key role that these attitudes play by suggesting that female participants with more traditional gender role attitudes are likely to have greater rape myth acceptance as compared to male participants with more egalitarian gender role attitudes. Implications of these results and future directions are discussed. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2019-04-20T06:53:55Z 2019-04-20T06:53:55Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76868 en 91 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Ng, Li Ling
Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
description Given the importance of rape myth acceptance in attitudes towards sexual violence and victims as well as the paucity of such studies in a non-western context, this study aimed to examine whether empathy and gender role attitudes interact with gender to influence rape myth acceptance in Singapore. One hundred and forty-one Singaporeans and Permanent Residents (52 males, 89 females) aged 18 to 57 years were randomly assigned to either an objective or empathy condition, in which they were instructed to either remain detached or to place themselves in the victim’s position while reading a written vignette of a rape scenario. Results showed that lower levels of empathy were not significantly associated with rape myth acceptance, and both empathy and empathy priming did not interact with gender to affect rape myth acceptance. However, consistent with past studies, male participants were found to have significantly higher rape myth acceptance and lower levels of empathy than female participants. In addition, the study found gender role attitudes to be a significant moderator of the relationship between gender and RMA. The results help provide insight into the key role that these attitudes play by suggesting that female participants with more traditional gender role attitudes are likely to have greater rape myth acceptance as compared to male participants with more egalitarian gender role attitudes. Implications of these results and future directions are discussed.
author2 Khader Majeed
author_facet Khader Majeed
Ng, Li Ling
format Final Year Project
author Ng, Li Ling
author_sort Ng, Li Ling
title Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
title_short Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
title_full Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
title_fullStr Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
title_full_unstemmed Rape myth acceptance in Singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
title_sort rape myth acceptance in singapore : understanding the roles of gender, empathy and attitudes toward women
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76868
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