written by Jill Neimark
written by Jill Neimark
I can’t intervene myself, because I’m not really there. I’m wearing a virtual reality (VR) headset in the office of Laura Salazar, professor of health promotion and behavior in the School of Public Health. Salazar and her colleagues wrote the script for this brief film — called “Real Decisions” — as part of her ongoing research on the impact of interactive educational tools and their ability to stem violence. It’s a fully immersive 3D short produced with the help of Georgia State’s Creative Media Industries Institute as well as faculty and doctoral students with expertise in infectious diseases, neuroscience and behavioral science. In the VR film, the same scene plays out four different times, with four different endings.Each ending highlights one of the “four D’s” of effective bystander intervention: direct (directly intervene), distract (distract either individual), delegate (seek help from someone with more influence) or delay (check in with the young woman later).
The VR program is so vivid that a month later, as I write this, I still feel as if I had been there — and as if I had actually experienced the interventions. “It feels like you’re in the room and they’re talking directly to you, and that’s more powerful than didactic learning,” Salazar explains. “We’re conducting a pilot study now with 40 male and female Georgia State undergraduates to measure the impact of ‘Real Decisions.’ We’re analyzing whether viewing it changes bystander attitudes, intentions and behaviors even a month after students are shown the film.”
Salazar’s project is just one example of the kind of work coming out of the Center for Research on Interpersonal Violence, established in 2017. Led by psychology professor Dominic Parrott, the center brings together a diverse group of researchers from psychology, social work, public health and criminal justice to understand what fuels violence and what we can do to prevent it. They study everything from “toxic” masculinity to bystander intervention, what constitutes consent to sex and how alcohol fuels violence.
“Violence doesn’t happen in isolation,” says Parrott, who sees breaking down academic silos as critical to understanding and preventing assault. He explains that violence is connected, like a starburst, to mental and physical health, personality, relationships, family systems, intimate partnerships, community, the broader culture and social ecology. Violent acts can be influenced by peer group values, alcohol, gender and concepts of masculinity.
“We’re trying to cut across all those boundaries,” says Parrott.
HOW “MAN ENOUGH” CAN FUEL VIOLENCE
It has been a quarter century since the Violence Against Women Act was passed by Congress, an act that created and supported programs to dramatically improve national and local responses to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. In 2011, the U.S. Department of Education let colleges know they would lose federal funding if they didn’t do a better job of protecting students. As a result, most instituted mandatory orientation or education for incoming freshmen. In 2014, the White House established a task force to help protect students from campus violence, and in 2015, Congress introduced the Campus Accountability and Safety Act, which required better coordination with local police departments when accusations are made.
And yet in spite of all this effort, and even with the indelible imprint of #MeToo, interpersonal violence still plagues our society nationwide. Global estimates published by the World Health Organization indicate that about one in three women has experienced either physical and/or sexual partner violence or non-partner violence in their lifetime. Across the country, about 23 percent of undergraduate females and 5.4 percent of undergraduate males experience rape or sexual assault through physical force, violence or incapacitation, according to the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network. Violence against minorities, marginalized groups and those in the LGBT community is also problematic. Most victims don’t report the incidents, believing it’s a personal matter, or because they fear reprisal.
Researchers at Georgia State are hoping to change that by developing tools that can help prevent or de-escalate violence. Addressing internalized masculine norms is one key.
New research shows that internalized toxic masculinity (where rape or coercion is seen as a badge of honor, where “no” is thought to mean “maybe” or “yes,” and where hostility towards women fuels anger) can serve as tinder to fuel assault. With Parrott and other colleagues, associate professor of psychology Kevin Swartout has found that men who adhere strongly to these domineering masculine norms may feel compelled to be sexually aggressive and coercive toward an intimate partner in order to maintain their dominance. They also experience more anger at gay men. One Georgia State study found hyper-masculine norms led to anger when participants were shown a video depicting intimate behavior between gay men.
It’s important to address the full range of sexual violence, the researchers say, because rape is not solely defined by the use of physical force. Collaborating with other universities, Swartout, Parrott and Sarah Cook, a psychology professor and associate dean in the Honors College, have uncovered evidence that while the overwhelming majority (over 80 percent) of men are unlikely to perpetrate any sexual violence, almost 10 percent of men use tactics such as verbal coercion or getting their partner drunk. That’s far more prevalent than those who use any means, including physical force (just 1.5 percent). Because this second group of men can and do perpetrate rape, says Swartout, addressing campus social norms and providing education around consent is critical.
One way to affect behavior is through the peer group — a young man’s friends. Often, in campus life, peer groups can share toxic masculine norms. (Witness the scandals associated with fraternity hazing rituals.) According to Swartout, research going back to the 1960s shows young men from about age 14 to 24 are most influenced by their same-age peers, more than their parents, teachers or other authorities. Peer groups with high hostility toward women may egg each other on, while those with low hostility may keep each other in check.
“Peer networks can influence male sexual aggression positively or negatively,” Swartout says.
Still, attitudes and behavior may evolve during adolescence and young adulthood. In 2015, Swartout found men who had been aggressive or violent in high school sometimes turned over a new leaf in college.
“Some of them actually stopped being violent,” says Swartout. “We think it’s because moving to campus is one of the few times in a young person’s life when they can have a clean slate, and their social networks almost entirely turn over.”
In essence, they might have traded up their peer group for a more enlightened bunch of buddies.
More recently, Swartout teamed up with Salazar and Monica Swahn, Distinguished University Professor of Epidemiology in the School of Public Health, to conduct a longitudinal study of men’s changing mores as they go through the college experience and integrate into a new peer group. Called FreshMEN of Georgia and funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the project assessed the changing attitudes of male first-year college students recruited from 30 colleges across Georgia. Swartout says his long-term plan is to create a program that infuses pro-social norms and attitudes into these male peer groups.
The Center for Research on Interpersonal Violence brings together a diverse group of faculty to understand what fuels violence and what we can do to prevent it. From left to right: Center director Dominic Parrott, professor of psychology in the College of Arts & Sciences; Laura Salazar, professor of health promotion and behavior in the School of Public Health; Kevin Swartout, associate professor of psychology in the College of Arts & Sciences; Leah Daigle, professor of criminal justice and criminology in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies.
I can’t intervene myself, because I’m not really there. I’m wearing a virtual reality (VR) headset in the office of Laura Salazar, professor of health promotion and behavior in the School of Public Health. Salazar and her colleagues wrote the script for this brief film — called “Real Decisions” — as part of her ongoing research on the impact of interactive educational tools and their ability to stem violence. It’s a fully immersive 3D short produced with the help of Georgia State’s Creative Media Industries Institute as well as faculty and doctoral students with expertise in infectious diseases, neuroscience and behavioral science. In the VR film, the same scene plays out four different times, with four different endings.Each ending highlights one of the “four D’s” of effective bystander intervention: direct (directly intervene), distract (distract either individual), delegate (seek help from someone with more influence) or delay (check in with the young woman later).
The VR program is so vivid that a month later, as I write this, I still feel as if I had been there — and as if I had actually experienced the interventions. “It feels like you’re in the room and they’re talking directly to you, and that’s more powerful than didactic learning,” Salazar explains. “We’re conducting a pilot study now with 40 male and female Georgia State undergraduates to measure the impact of ‘Real Decisions.’ We’re analyzing whether viewing it changes bystander attitudes, intentions and behaviors even a month after students are shown the film.”
Salazar’s project is just one example of the kind of work coming out of the Center for Research on Interpersonal Violence, established in 2017. Led by psychology professor Dominic Parrott, the center brings together a diverse group of researchers from psychology, social work, public health and criminal justice to understand what fuels violence and what we can do to prevent it. They study everything from “toxic” masculinity to bystander intervention, what constitutes consent to sex and how alcohol fuels violence.
“Violence doesn’t happen in isolation,” says Parrott, who sees breaking down academic silos as critical to understanding and preventing assault. He explains that violence is connected, like a starburst, to mental and physical health, personality, relationships, family systems, intimate partnerships, community, the broader culture and social ecology. Violent acts can be influenced by peer group values, alcohol, gender and concepts of masculinity.
“We’re trying to cut across all those boundaries,” says Parrott.
HOW “MAN ENOUGH” CAN FUEL VIOLENCE
It has been a quarter century since the Violence Against Women Act was passed by Congress, an act that created and supported programs to dramatically improve national and local responses to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. In 2011, the U.S. Department of Education let colleges know they would lose federal funding if they didn’t do a better job of protecting students. As a result, most instituted mandatory orientation or education for incoming freshmen. In 2014, the White House established a task force to help protect students from campus violence, and in 2015, Congress introduced the Campus Accountability and Safety Act, which required better coordination with local police departments when accusations are made.
And yet in spite of all this effort, and even with the indelible imprint of #MeToo, interpersonal violence still plagues our society nationwide. Global estimates published by the World Health Organization indicate that about one in three women has experienced either physical and/or sexual partner violence or non-partner violence in their lifetime. Across the country, about 23 percent of undergraduate females and 5.4 percent of undergraduate males experience rape or sexual assault through physical force, violence or incapacitation, according to the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network. Violence against minorities, marginalized groups and those in the LGBT community is also problematic. Most victims don’t report the incidents, believing it’s a personal matter, or because they fear reprisal.
Researchers at Georgia State are hoping to change that by developing tools that can help prevent or de-escalate violence. Addressing internalized masculine norms is one key.
New research shows that internalized toxic masculinity (where rape or coercion is seen as a badge of honor, where “no” is thought to mean “maybe” or “yes,” and where hostility towards women fuels anger) can serve as tinder to fuel assault. With Parrott and other colleagues, associate professor of psychology Kevin Swartout has found that men who adhere strongly to these domineering masculine norms may feel compelled to be sexually aggressive and coercive toward an intimate partner in order to maintain their dominance. They also experience more anger at gay men. One Georgia State study found hyper-masculine norms led to anger when participants were shown a video depicting intimate behavior between gay men.
It’s important to address the full range of sexual violence, the researchers say, because rape is not solely defined by the use of physical force. Collaborating with other universities, Swartout, Parrott and Sarah Cook, a psychology professor and associate dean in the Honors College, have uncovered evidence that while the overwhelming majority (over 80 percent) of men are unlikely to perpetrate any sexual violence, almost 10 percent of men use tactics such as verbal coercion or getting their partner drunk. That’s far more prevalent than those who use any means, including physical force (just 1.5 percent). Because this second group of men can and do perpetrate rape, says Swartout, addressing campus social norms and providing education around consent is critical.
▲ The Center for Research on Interpersonal Violence brings together a diverse group of faculty to understand what fuels violence and what we can do to prevent it. From left to right: Center director Dominic Parrott, professor of psychology in the College of Arts & Sciences; Laura Salazar, professor of health promotion and behavior in the School of Public Health; Kevin Swartout, associate professor of psychology in the College of Arts & Sciences; Leah Daigle, professor of criminal justice and criminology in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies.
One way to affect behavior is through the peer group — a young man’s friends. Often, in campus life, peer groups can share toxic masculine norms. (Witness the scandals associated with fraternity hazing rituals.) According to Swartout, research going back to the 1960s shows young men from about age 14 to 24 are most influenced by their same-age peers, more than their parents, teachers or other authorities. Peer groups with high hostility toward women may egg each other on, while those with low hostility may keep each other in check.
“Peer networks can influence male sexual aggression positively or negatively,” Swartout says.
Still, attitudes and behavior may evolve during adolescence and young adulthood. In 2015, Swartout found men who had been aggressive or violent in high school sometimes turned over a new leaf in college.
“Some of them actually stopped being violent,” says Swartout. “We think it’s because moving to campus is one of the few times in a young person’s life when they can have a clean slate, and their social networks almost entirely turn over.”
In essence, they might have traded up their peer group for a more enlightened bunch of buddies.
More recently, Swartout teamed up with Salazar and Monica Swahn, Distinguished University Professor of Epidemiology in the School of Public Health, to conduct a longitudinal study of men’s changing mores as they go through the college experience and integrate into a new peer group. Called FreshMEN of Georgia and funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the project assessed the changing attitudes of male first-year college students recruited from 30 colleges across Georgia. Swartout says his long-term plan is to create a program that infuses pro-social norms and attitudes into these male peer groups.
One way to affect behavior is through the peer group — a young man’s friends. Often, in campus life, peer groups can share toxic masculine norms. (Witness the scandals associated with fraternity hazing rituals.) According to Swartout, research going back to the 1960s shows young men from about age 14 to 24 are most influenced by their same-age peers, more than their parents, teachers or other authorities. Peer groups with high hostility toward women may egg each other on, while those with low hostility may keep each other in check.
“Peer networks can influence male sexual aggression positively or negatively,” Swartout says.
Still, attitudes and behavior may evolve during adolescence and young adulthood. In 2015, Swartout found men who had been aggressive or violent in high school sometimes turned over a new leaf in college.
“Some of them actually stopped being violent,” says Swartout. “We think it’s because moving to campus is one of the few times in a young person’s life when they can have a clean slate, and their social networks almost entirely turn over.”
In essence, they might have traded up their peer group for a more enlightened bunch of buddies.
More recently, Swartout teamed up with Salazar and Monica Swahn, Distinguished University Professor of Epidemiology in the School of Public Health, to conduct a longitudinal study of men’s changing mores as they go through the college experience and integrate into a new peer group. Called FreshMEN of Georgia and funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the project assessed the changing attitudes of male first-year college students recruited from 30 colleges across Georgia. Swartout says his long-term plan is to create a program that infuses pro-social norms and attitudes into these male peer groups.
One way to affect behavior is through the peer group — a young man’s friends. Often, in campus life, peer groups can share toxic masculine norms. (Witness the scandals associated with fraternity hazing rituals.) According to Swartout, research going back to the 1960s shows young men from about age 14 to 24 are most influenced by their same-age peers, more than their parents, teachers or other authorities. Peer groups with high hostility toward women may egg each other on, while those with low hostility may keep each other in check.
“Peer networks can influence male sexual aggression positively or negatively,” Swartout says.
Still, attitudes and behavior may evolve during adolescence and young adulthood. In 2015, Swartout found men who had been aggressive or violent in high school sometimes turned over a new leaf in college.
“Some of them actually stopped being violent,” says Swartout. “We think it’s because moving to campus is one of the few times in a young person’s life when they can have a clean slate, and their social networks almost entirely turn over.”
In essence, they might have traded up their peer group for a more enlightened bunch of buddies.
More recently, Swartout teamed up with Salazar and Monica Swahn, Distinguished University Professor of Epidemiology in the School of Public Health, to conduct a longitudinal study of men’s changing mores as they go through the college experience and integrate into a new peer group. Called FreshMEN of Georgia and funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the project assessed the changing attitudes of male first-year college students recruited from 30 colleges across Georgia. Swartout says his long-term plan is to create a program that infuses pro-social norms and attitudes into these male peer groups.
▼ The Center for Research on Interpersonal Violence brings together a diverse group of faculty to understand what fuels violence and what we can do to prevent it.
Left: Center director Dominic Parrott, Professor of psychology in the College of Arts & Sciences | Right: Laura Salazar, Professor of health promotion and behavior in the School of Public Health
Left: Kevin Swartout, associate professor of psychology in the College of Arts & Sciences | Right: Leah Daigle, professor of criminal justice and criminology in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies
BLURRED LINES
Alcohol is an ever-present social lubricant in our society. And, says Parrott, it is one of many causes of assault — although the likelihood that alcohol will cause violence in a given situation depends on a range of other factors. Half of all sexual assaults involve alcohol consumption. Drinking loosens inhibitions and makes it easier to push past consent. Research by Salazar has found assault tends to happen more often in the presence of a cluster of risk factors, including alcohol. (Other factors include watching pornography, subscribing to exaggerated male stereotypes and having friends who encourage sexual violence.)
Alcohol contributes because, as research by Parrott, Swartout and colleagues at Purdue University shows, drinking drives aggression and impairs executive functioning. It also impairs proper processing of risk.
Inebriation causes a cognitive phenomenon called alcohol myopia — where attention is wholly captured in a kind of spotlight effect by what is immediate and in front of you, while the normal ability to monitor all the other stimuli around you is impaired. A male or female who is drunk may only see the person before them, as if he or she were a player on stage in a darkened theater.
DRINKING DRIVES AGGRESSION AND IMPAIRS EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING. IT ALSO IMPAIRS PROPER PROCESSING OF RISK.
Alcohol also has a negative impact on bystander intervention. In a 2019 study led by Parrott and doctoral student Ruschelle Leone, young men discussed whether to show sexually explicit images to a young woman who did not wish to see the images — a way of simulating sexual violence in the lab. (Only one of the men was an actual participant, the others appeared to be participants but had been recruited and supplied with scripts.) Some of the men consumed alcohol and others did not. Drinking had the strongest effect on men with the highest intent to help.
“Alcohol reduced the likelihood that a bystander will intervene,” says Parrott, “particularly for men who would typically want to help in that situation.”
Parrott adds that women who report being assaulted say that in 23 percent of cases there were other people around who could have stopped it. When bystanders were present prior to a sexual assault and had an opportunity to intervene, they had consumed alcohol in 88 percent of those cases.
For vulnerable females, alcohol alters judgment, decreases reaction time, impairs decision-making and delays the recognition of danger. According to Leah Daigle, a professor in the Department of Criminal Justice & Criminology in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, female students in their first year of college who are heavy drinkers belong in a “red zone” of risk, and are more vulnerable to sexual aggression than older students. Preventive education programs for college students have maximum benefit during this early period.
This is especially important because, says Daigle, recurring victims experience a large proportion of all victimization incidents. In a 2008 study of sexual victimization of college women, Daigle and her colleagues found that although just 7 percent of college women experienced more than one sexual victimization during an academic year, those incidents accounted for over 70 percent of sexual victimization incidents reported in the study.
“If we can intervene after an initial victimization,” says Daigle, “we can dramatically reduce the risk of additional incidents.”
For that reason, providing education as to what consent truly means is profoundly important. Salazar has created another interactive program called “Real Consent” — which has separate modules for both men and women — that has been proven effective in helping to prevent violence and increase pro-social bystander intervention.
“Oftentimes there are gray areas when initiating sex. Sexual assault is not always about a guy physically forcing himself on an incapacitated woman,” says Salazar.
The program focuses on understanding effective and real consent, the role of alcohol in negating consent and enhancing empathy for victims. There are myths about consent, according to Salazar, such as “the idea that a woman says ‘no’ when she means ‘yes’ or the way she dresses can indicate whether she wants to have sex.”
The program deconstructs those myths and explores gender roles that men and women adopt that can create misunderstandings. It also covers male victimization.
Her approach has been a success. Salazar’s research shows that men participating in “Real Consent” were significantly less likely to perpetrate sexual violence, and significantly more likely to intervene as a bystander in a situation that might lead to nonconsensual sex. Soon, says Salazar, the program will be made available to other universities.
Connecting researchers with university leaders is an important part of the center’s work, says Parrott. Five years ago, Georgia State hosted a campus climate forum, which brought scholars together with college administrators and those working in student health centers. Out of that conference grew the Administrator-Research Consortium, a nationwide network, and a campus climate survey, crafted by Swartout along with colleagues, campus advocates, students and law enforcement. The 30-minute survey, which has been adopted by more than 300 universities nationally and internationally, measures the prevalence of campus sexual misconduct and related attitudes about both perpetration and victimization on campus. It was pre-tested with more than 2,200 students and is organized into modules other universities can adapt to their needs.
In 2018, The National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine used results from data that had been gathered in 2015 by the University of Texas System. With Swartout’s help, the researchers examined sexual harassment of women across STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields. They found women enrolled in medical school experienced “alarmingly high rates of sexual harassment,” says Swartout, with 47 percent of female students reporting they had been sexually harassed. For women studying engineering, the rate of harassment was 27 percent, and for women studying science, 20 percent.
Long term, says Parrott, he hopes that the center’s interdisciplinary approach and its focus on adapting research to help solve societal problems will serve as a national model.
“In my view,” he says, “this is the only way we can address this extraordinarily complicated – but preventable – problem.”
BLURRED LINES
Alcohol is an ever-present social lubricant in our society. And, says Parrott, it is one of many causes of assault — although the likelihood that alcohol will cause violence in a given situation depends on a range of other factors. Half of all sexual assaults involve alcohol consumption. Drinking loosens inhibitions and makes it easier to push past consent. Research by Salazar has found assault tends to happen more often in the presence of a cluster of risk factors, including alcohol. (Other factors include watching pornography, subscribing to exaggerated male stereotypes and having friends who encourage sexual violence.)
Alcohol contributes because, as research by Parrott, Swartout and colleagues at Purdue University shows, drinking drives aggression and impairs executive functioning. It also impairs proper processing of risk.
Inebriation causes a cognitive phenomenon called alcohol myopia — where attention is wholly captured in a kind of spotlight effect by what is immediate and in front of you, while the normal ability to monitor all the other stimuli around you is impaired. A male or female who is drunk may only see the person before them, as if he or she were a player on stage in a darkened theater.
DRINKING DRIVES AGGRESSION AND IMPAIRS EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING. IT ALSO IMPAIRS PROPER PROCESSING
OF RISK.
Alcohol also has a negative impact on bystander intervention. In a 2019 study led by Parrott and doctoral student Ruschelle Leone, young men discussed whether to show sexually explicit images to a young woman who did not wish to see the images — a way of simulating sexual violence in the lab. (Only one of the men was an actual participant, the others appeared to be participants but had been recruited and supplied with scripts.) Some of the men consumed alcohol and others did not. Drinking had the strongest effect on men with the highest intent to help.
“Alcohol reduced the likelihood that a bystander will intervene,” says Parrott, “particularly for men who would typically want to help in that situation.”
The program deconstructs those myths and explores gender roles that men and women adopt that can create misunderstandings. It also covers male victimization.
Her approach has been a success. Salazar’s research shows that men participating in “Real Consent” were significantly less likely to perpetrate sexual violence, and significantly more likely to intervene as a bystander in a situation that might lead to nonconsensual sex. Soon, says Salazar, the program will be made available to other universities.
Connecting researchers with university leaders is an important part of the center’s work, says Parrott. Five years ago, Georgia State hosted a campus climate forum, which brought scholars together with college administrators and those working in student health centers. Out of that conference grew the Administrator-Research Consortium, a nationwide network, and a campus climate survey, crafted by Swartout along with colleagues, campus advocates, students and law enforcement. The 30-minute survey, which has been adopted by more than 300 universities nationally and internationally, measures the prevalence of campus sexual misconduct and related attitudes about both perpetration and victimization on campus. It was pre-tested with more than 2,200 students and is organized into modules other universities can adapt to their needs.
In 2018, The National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine used results from data that had been gathered in 2015 by the University of Texas System. With Swartout’s help, the researchers examined sexual harassment of women across STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields. They found women enrolled in medical school experienced “alarmingly high rates of sexual harassment,” says Swartout, with 47 percent of female students reporting they had been sexually harassed. For women studying engineering, the rate of harassment was 27 percent, and for women studying science, 20 percent.
Long term, says Parrott, he hopes that the center’s interdisciplinary approach and its focus on adapting research to help solve societal problems will serve as a national model.
“In my view,” he says, “this is the only way we can address this extraordinarily complicated – but preventable – problem.”
BLURRED LINES
Alcohol is an ever-present social lubricant in our society. And, says Parrott, it is one of many causes of assault — although the likelihood that alcohol will cause violence in a given situation depends on a range of other factors. Half of all sexual assaults involve alcohol consumption. Drinking loosens inhibitions and makes it easier to push past consent. Research by Salazar has found assault tends to happen more often in the presence of a cluster of risk factors, including alcohol. (Other factors include watching pornography, subscribing to exaggerated male stereotypes and having friends who encourage sexual violence.)
Alcohol contributes because, as research by Parrott, Swartout and colleagues at Purdue University shows, drinking drives aggression and impairs executive functioning. It also impairs proper processing of risk.
DRINKING DRIVES AGGRESSION AND IMPAIRS EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING. IT ALSO IMPAIRS PROPER PROCESSING
OF RISK.
Inebriation causes a cognitive phenomenon called alcohol myopia — where attention is wholly captured in a kind of spotlight effect by what is immediate and in front of you, while the normal ability to monitor all the other stimuli around you is impaired. A male or female who is drunk may only see the person before them, as if he or she were a player on stage in a darkened theater.
Alcohol also has a negative impact on bystander intervention. In a 2019 study led by Parrott and doctoral student Ruschelle Leone, young men discussed whether to show sexually explicit images to a young woman who did not wish to see the images — a way of simulating sexual violence in the lab. (Only one of the men was an actual participant, the others appeared to be participants but had been recruited and supplied with scripts.) Some of the men consumed alcohol and others did not. Drinking had the strongest effect on men with the highest intent to help.
“Alcohol reduced the likelihood that a bystander will intervene,” says Parrott, “particularly for men who would typically want to help in that situation.”
The program deconstructs those myths and explores gender roles that men and women adopt that can create misunderstandings. It also covers male victimization.
Her approach has been a success. Salazar’s research shows that men participating in “Real Consent” were significantly less likely to perpetrate sexual violence, and significantly more likely to intervene as a bystander in a situation that might lead to nonconsensual sex. Soon, says Salazar, the program will be made available to other universities.
Connecting researchers with university leaders is an important part of the center’s work, says Parrott. Five years ago, Georgia State hosted a campus climate forum, which brought scholars together with college administrators and those working in student health centers. Out of that conference grew the Administrator-Research Consortium, a nationwide network, and a campus climate survey, crafted by Swartout along with colleagues, campus advocates, students and law enforcement. The 30-minute survey, which has been adopted by more than 300 universities nationally and internationally, measures the prevalence of campus sexual misconduct and related attitudes about both perpetration and victimization on campus. It was pre-tested with more than 2,200 students and is organized into modules other universities can adapt to their needs.
In 2018, The National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine used results from data that had been gathered in 2015 by the University of Texas System. With Swartout’s help, the researchers examined sexual harassment of women across STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields. They found women enrolled in medical school experienced “alarmingly high rates of sexual harassment,” says Swartout, with 47 percent of female students reporting they had been sexually harassed. For women studying engineering, the rate of harassment was 27 percent, and for women studying science, 20 percent.
Long term, says Parrott, he hopes that the center’s interdisciplinary approach and its focus on adapting research to help solve societal problems will serve as a national model.
“In my view,” he says, “this is the only way we can address this extraordinarily complicated – but preventable – problem.”
DRINKING DRIVES AGGRESSION AND IMPAIRS EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING. IT ALSO IMPAIRS PROPER PROCESSING
OF RISK.
BLURRED LINES
Alcohol is an ever-present social lubricant in our society. And, says Parrott, it is one of many causes of assault — although the likelihood that alcohol will cause violence in a given situation depends on a range of other factors. Half of all sexual assaults involve alcohol consumption. Drinking loosens inhibitions and makes it easier to push past consent. Research by Salazar has found assault tends to happen more often in the presence of a cluster of risk factors, including alcohol. (Other factors include watching pornography, subscribing to exaggerated male stereotypes and having friends who encourage sexual violence.)
Alcohol contributes because, as research by Parrott, Swartout and colleagues at Purdue University shows, drinking drives aggression and impairs executive functioning. It also impairs proper processing of risk.
Inebriation causes a cognitive phenomenon called alcohol myopia — where attention is wholly captured in a kind of spotlight effect by what is immediate and in front of you, while the normal ability to monitor all the other stimuli around you is impaired. A male or female who is drunk may only see the person before them, as if he or she were a player on stage in a darkened theater.
Alcohol also has a negative impact on bystander intervention. In a 2019 study led by Parrott and doctoral student Ruschelle Leone, young men discussed whether to show sexually explicit images to a young woman who did not wish to see the images — a way of simulating sexual violence in the lab. (Only one of the men was an actual participant, the others appeared to be participants but had been recruited and supplied with scripts.) Some of the men consumed alcohol and others did not. Drinking had the strongest effect on men with the highest intent to help.
“Alcohol reduced the likelihood that a bystander will intervene,” says Parrott, “particularly for men who would typically want to help in that situation.”
The program deconstructs those myths and explores gender roles that men and women adopt that can create misunderstandings. It also covers male victimization.
Her approach has been a success. Salazar’s research shows that men participating in “Real Consent” were significantly less likely to perpetrate sexual violence, and significantly more likely to intervene as a bystander in a situation that might lead to nonconsensual sex. Soon, says Salazar, the program will be made available to other universities.
Connecting researchers with university leaders is an important part of the center’s work, says Parrott. Five years ago, Georgia State hosted a campus climate forum, which brought scholars together with college administrators and those working in student health centers. Out of that conference grew the Administrator-Research Consortium, a nationwide network, and a campus climate survey, crafted by Swartout along with colleagues, campus advocates, students and law enforcement. The 30-minute survey, which has been adopted by more than 300 universities nationally and internationally, measures the prevalence of campus sexual misconduct and related attitudes about both perpetration and victimization on campus. It was pre-tested with more than 2,200 students and is organized into modules other universities can adapt to their needs.
In 2018, The National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine used results from data that had been gathered in 2015 by the University of Texas System. With Swartout’s help, the researchers examined sexual harassment of women across STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields. They found women enrolled in medical school experienced “alarmingly high rates of sexual harassment,” says Swartout, with 47 percent of female students reporting they had been sexually harassed. For women studying engineering, the rate of harassment was 27 percent, and for women studying science, 20 percent.
Long term, says Parrott, he hopes that the center’s interdisciplinary approach and its focus on adapting research to help solve societal problems will serve as a national model.
“In my view,” he says, “this is the only way we can address this extraordinarily complicated – but preventable – problem.”
EVERY CHILD DESERVES A VIOLENCE-FREE HOME
A parent education program aims to protect kids from abuse and neglect.
CHILD ABUSE ISN’T ALWAYS a ripped-from the-headlines case of physical or sexual violence. Sometimes it’s a parent’s inability to provide for a child’s basic needs or protect a child from harm.
It might be a young mother who can’t afford child care, so she leaves the kids in front of the TV and locks the door. Or parents who don’t understand how to interact with their child in a developmentally appropriate, positive way — maybe because their own parents never modeled the same behavior.
SafeCare, a parent training program developed by emeritus professor of public health John Lutzker, helps moms and dads of young children develop the skills they need to become better parents. The National SafeCare Training & Research Center (NSTRC), housed within the Mark Chaffin Center for Healthy Development, works to bring this model to the masses by training and supporting child welfare agencies around the world.
The program focuses on building three important parenting skills. The first is positive parent-child interactions: teaching parents how to structure routines to stop young children from acting out and the importance of engaging and playing with their kids to build a strong relationship. SafeCare also educates parents about child development, so they can have appropriate expectations for their kids.
“This could be as simple as explaining what the rules are, what they can expect if they follow the rules and what they can expect if they don’t,” says Shannon Self-Brown, professor of health promotion and behavior, and co-director of the NSTRC.
Second, the program emphasizes home safety and supervision, because parents are often referred to child welfare services because of unsafe living conditions or lack of appropriate supervision. Third, it teaches parents about child health — how to know when kids are sick or injured, and what to do.
The SafeCare model targets parents of kids from birth to age 5, which is the age group that’s at the highest risk for child maltreatment reports. The program is used in more than 120 accredited sites across the U.S. and in international settings.
“We know SafeCare is working for families,” says Daniel Whitaker, professor of health promotion and behavior and NSTRC’s co-director. “Now we’re looking at how we can increase our reach to serve more families each year.”
Listen as Dominic Parrott discusses the intersection of alcohol and assault on the Research Podcast from Georgia State University.
Listen as Dominic Parrott discusses the intersection of alcohol and assault on the Research Podcast from Georgia State University.
Listen as Dominic Parrott discusses the intersection of alcohol and assault on the Research Podcast from Georgia State University.
EVERY CHILD DESERVES A VIOLENCE-FREE HOME
A parent education program aims to protect kids from abuse and neglect.
CHILD ABUSE ISN’T ALWAYS a ripped-from the-headlines case of physical or sexual violence. Sometimes it’s a parent’s inability to provide for a child’s basic needs or protect a child from harm.
It might be a young mother who can’t afford child care, so she leaves the kids in front of the TV and locks the door. Or parents who don’t understand how to interact with their child in a developmentally appropriate, positive way — maybe because their own parents never modeled the same behavior.
SafeCare, a parent training program developed by emeritus professor of public health John Lutzker, helps moms and dads of young children develop the skills they need to become better parents. The National SafeCare Training & Research Center (NSTRC), housed within the Mark Chaffin Center for Healthy Development, works to bring this model to the masses by training and supporting child welfare agencies around the world.
The program focuses on building three important parenting skills. The first is positive parent-child interactions: teaching parents how to structure routines to stop young children from acting out and the importance of engaging and playing with their kids to build a strong relationship. SafeCare also educates parents about child development, so they can have appropriate expectations for their kids.
“This could be as simple as explaining what the rules are, what they can expect if they follow the rules and what they can expect if they don’t,” says Shannon Self-Brown, professor of health promotion and behavior, and co-director of the NSTRC.
Second, the program emphasizes home safety and supervision, because parents are often referred to child welfare services because of unsafe living conditions or lack of appropriate supervision. Third, it teaches parents about child health — how to know when kids are sick or injured, and what to do.
The SafeCare model targets parents of kids from birth to age 5, which is the age group that’s at the highest risk for child maltreatment reports. The program is used in more than 120 accredited sites across the U.S. and in international settings.
“We know SafeCare is working for families,” says Daniel Whitaker, professor of health promotion and behavior and NSTRC’s co-director. “Now we’re looking at how we can increase our reach to serve more families each year.”
illustrations by Peter Strain | photos by Steven Thackston
illustrations by Peter Strain
photos by Steven Thackston
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