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About

Dr. Antonia Abbey is a distinguished Professor of Psychology and a leading expert in the field of social psychology with a specialized focus on women's health, sexual violence prevention, and substance abuse. With a Ph.D. in Social Psychology from Northwestern University, Dr. Abbey has spent decades advancing interdisciplinary research that addresses complex public health issues through a biopsychosocial lens. Currently based at Wayne State University, she integrates theoretical frameworks from social psychology, developmental psychology, alcohol studies, stress and coping research, and criminal justice to explore behavioral phenomena and social harm related to gender, substance use, and violence. A key component of Dr. Abbey’s research is the exploration of the psychosocial and situational factors that increase the likelihood of men’s sexual aggression. She has extensively investigated the role of alcohol in facilitating sexually aggressive behavior and has examined how its psychological and pharmacological effects interact with individual personality traits, past experiences, and gender norms to exacerbate risk-taking and misjudgments in intimate situations. Using experimental designs and survey-based methodologies, her work aims to unpack how these in-the-moment decisions unfold and how preventive interventions can be better tailored. In addition to perpetrators, Dr. Abbey also dedicates her research to understanding victimization and recovery, particularly for women who have experienced sexual assault. She examines how variables such as alcohol use and coping strategies affect women's psychological resilience and long-term well-being. Her innovative approaches have included the use of virtual reality simulations to study affective and behavioral responses in dating contexts, a project supported by multiple grants from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). Beyond her prolific research, Dr. Abbey is a highly regarded educator and mentor. She teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses in health psychology, gender psychology, close relationships, and interdisciplinary research methods. Her mentorship excellence has earned her several prestigious awards, including the Distinguished Mentoring Award from the APA's Division 35 and Wayne State University’s Outstanding Graduate Mentor Award. Dr. Abbey has served in numerous advisory and editorial roles, such as Editor of the journal Psychology of Violence and consultant for national organizations including the Department of Defense and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Her policy influence and contributions have significantly shaped national strategies around alcohol-related sexual violence and gender-based violence prevention. With accolades such as the Board of Governors Distinguished Faculty Fellow and membership in the Wayne State University Academy of Honors, Dr. Abbey remains a pioneering force in applying psychological science to real-world social problems. Her career exemplifies a commitment to improving public health outcomes through rigorous scholarship, evidence-based interventions, and empowering educational practices. Antonia (Toni) Abbey, Ph.D., has examined psychosocial factors that influence sexual assault survivors’ recovery, beginning with her dissertation research that examined survivors’ attempts to reestablish control, find meaning, and deal with the blame they experienced from professionals, family, and friends. Several more recent studies have explored the role of culture and ethnicity in disclosure and social support processes, with Angela Jacques-Tiura (now an assistant professor in Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences at WSU), Michelle Parkhill-Purdie (now an associate professor at Oakland University), Rifky Tkatch (now a senior researcher at Optum/United Health Group), and Sheri Pegram (currently completing her dissertation). In recent years, the White House, Congressional committees, and survivors have demanded solutions to end the high rates of sexual assault and other forms of sexual misconduct that occur on college campuses. These groups have spotlighted a problem that has often been trivialized, despite consistent reports of disturbingly high rates of sexual violence on college campuses that have been documented in empirical articles since the 1950s. The sexual violence that occurs on college campuses is part of a much larger problem. In a large U.S. nationally representative survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 19.3 percent of women reported being raped during their lifetime and 44.6 percent experienced another form of sexual violence. More than 93 percent of the perpetrators were men. This same survey found that 1.7 percent of men reported being raped in their lifetime. Public health professionals conceptualize sexual violence on a continuum with forcible rape at one end and verbal sexual harassment at the other end. Numerous studies have documented that all forms of sexual violence have a negative impact on victims, including their physical and emotional health, job and school performance, and their sense of safety and trust. Dr. Abbey also has a longstanding interest in understanding the causes of men’s sexual aggression against women, with an emphasis on how alcohol interacts with personality, attitudes, and past experience to increase some men’s likelihood of being sexually aggressive. As a social psychologist, she is guided by Kurt Lewin’s emphasis on the role of situational and individual factors on behavior, as well as his emphasis on conducting theory-based action-oriented research. Her studies use survey and experimental paradigms. In confidential surveys, participants provide detailed information about sexual assault characteristics, as well as their traits, attitudes, and experiences. In experimental research, participants can be randomly assigned to drink alcoholic or nonalcoholic beverages under controlled conditions to determine how intoxication affects their behavior. Each method has complementary strengths and limitations; thus, researchers have the greatest confidence in convergent findings. Dr. Abbey’s first empirical study of this issue at WSU was a survey conducted with a large representative sample of WSU students. With doctoral students, Lisa Thomson Ross (now a professor at the University of Charleston) and Pam McAuslan (now an associate professor at the University of Michigan Dearborn), support was found for a theoretical model which posited that beliefs and experiences associated with gender roles, dating, sexuality, and alcohol increased the likelihood of sexual aggression. This study’s findings were expanded in three important ways with the help of then graduate students Michelle Parkhill-Purdie (now an associate professor at Oakland University), Renee BeShears McLeod (now a vice president at Adient), A. Monique Clinton-Sherrod (now a research psychologist at Research Triangle Institute), and Tina Zawacki (now an associate professor at the University of Texas-San Antonio). First, this follow-up study was conducted with a community sample and demonstrated that common risk factors for sexual aggression found in studies with male college students (childhood sexual abuse, adolescent delinquency, alcohol problems, sexual dominance, positive attitudes about casual sex, supportive peer norms) were also risk factors in community samples. Second, this study found that the associations between risk factors and sexual aggression were similar for Caucasian and African American participants. Third, this study found that high levels of empathy were protective, reducing the relationship between sexual dominance and sexual aggression. In a recent related study conducted with Angela Jacques-Tiura (now an assistant professor in Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences at WSU), Rhiana Wegner (now an assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Boston, Jennifer Pierce (currently completing her dissertation), Sheri Pegram (currently completing her dissertation), and Jacqueline Woerner (now a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University’s Medical School), Dr. Abbey took a closer look at peer factors. The more that young single men reported having conversations with their male friends that used sexually objectifying language to describe women, the more likely they were to report being sexually aggressive with a woman that year. In a complementary manner, feeling comfortable discussing women using equalitarian language with male friends reduced the likelihood of sexual aggression that year. These findings support the maxim that “words matter” by producing a social climate in which sexual aggression is normalized. Several recent studies by Dr. Abbey’s research team and other researchers demonstrate that there are different trajectories of perpetration over time: some men start in adolescence and continue in young adulthood, some start in adolescence and stop, and some don’t start until young adulthood (and of course, many men never perpetrate sexual aggression). Determining the risk and protective factors associated with these different patterns has practical implications for developing prevention and treatment programs. More of these studies are needed to make definitive statements; however, they suggest that hostile attitudes toward women, peer norms that encourage sexual objectification of women, alcohol expectancies, heavy drinking, and casual sexual attitudes and behaviors are good targets for interventions. Experimental studies that randomly assign participants to drink an alcoholic or nonalcoholic beverage face the challenge of developing ethical procedures for assessing participants’ likelihood of being sexually violent. In past studies, along with Philip Buck (now a Director at GlaxoSmithKline) and Christopher Saenz (now a Senior Marketing Scientist at Marketing Strategies International), as well as several previously mentioned students, Dr. Abbey has examined the pharmacological effects of alcohol on participants’ decisions. In one study, they found an interaction between drinking conditions and pre-existing hostility levels. For sober participants, trait hostility did not affect their judgments. However, among intoxicated participants, the greater their trait hostility, the more willing they were to use coercive strategies to obtain sex from an unwilling woman. This finding exemplifies social psychology’s focus on the interplay of personality and situational factors. Dr. Abbey’s lab is currently developing sexual aggression paradigms using virtual reality technology to increase the range of (nonviolent and violent) choices that participants can make in response to a sexual refusal.

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Skills

Experience

Distinguished Professor of Psychology

Wichita State University, Kansas (WSU)

Apr-1990 to Present

Education

Northwestern University (McCormick)

Ph.D. in Social Psychology

Passout Year: 1982
Northwestern University (McCormick)

M.A. in Social Psychology

Passout Year: 1980
University of Michigan

B.A. in Psychology

Passout Year: 1975

Publication

  • dott image July, 2024

The Revised Sexual Experiences Survey Victimization Version (SES-V): Conceptualization, Modifications, Items and Scoring

The Sexual Experiences Survey [SES] is considered the gold standard measure of non-consensual sexual experiences. This article introduces a new victimization version [SES-V] developed by a m...

  • dott image July, 2024

Preliminary Evidence of Validity for the Verbally Pressured and Illegal Sexual Exploitation Modules of the Sexual Experiences Survey-Victimization

The Sexual Experiences Survey-Victimization (SES-V; see Koss et al., Citation2024) revises the prior 2007 Sexual Experiences Survey-Short Form Victimization (SES-SFV) in many ways, including...

  • dott image July, 2024

Words Can Hurt: A Taxonomy of Verbally Pressured Sexual Exploitation in the SES-V

This article describes the development of the Verbally Pressured Sexual Exploitation module of the Sexual Experiences Survey (SES)-Victimization (introduced by Koss et al., 2024). This modul...

  • dott image December, 2015

Trajectory Analysis of the Campus Serial Rapist Assumption

IMPORTANCE Rape on college campuses has been addressed recently by a presidential proclamation, federal legislation, advocacy groups, and popular media. Many initiatives assume that most c...

  • dott image December, 2015

Trajectory Analysis of the Campus Serial Rapist Assumption (Errors in Derivation Data and Validation Data)

We write to report errors in our article, “Trajectory Analysis of the Campus Serial Rapist Assumption,”1 published online July 13, 2015, in JAMA Pediatrics. After publication of this art...

  • dott image April, 2008

"Revising the SES: A collaborative process to improve assessment of sexual aggression and victimization": Erratum.

Reports an error in "Revising the SES: A collaborative process to improve assessment of sexual aggression and victimization" by Mary P. Koss, Antonia Abbey, Rebecca Campbell, Sarah Cook, Jea...

  • dott image December, 2007

Revising the SES: A Collaborative Process to Improve Assessment of Sexual Aggression and Victimization

The Sexual Experiences Survey (SES) assesses victimization and perpetration of unwanted sexual experiences (e.g., Koss, Gidycz, & Wisniewski, 1987). Revised versions of the SES that resulted...

  • dott image December, 2005

The Effects of Frame of Reference on Responses to Questions About Sexual Assault Victimization and Perpetration

Self-reports of sexual assault are affected by a variety of factors including the number of questions, question phrasing, and context. Participants (307 women, 166 men) were randomly assigne...

Role in Research Journals

Honours & Awards

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Outstanding Graduate Mentor Award
Awarded by:

Wayne State University

Year: 2000