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Paper Title

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

Keywords

  • Frame of Reference
  • Sexual Assault Victimization
  • Sexual Assault Perpetration
  • Self-Report Bias
  • Question Phrasing
  • Survey Design
  • Forced Sex Tactics
  • Questionnaire Framing
  • Response Effects
  • Victimization Reporting
  • Perpetration Reporting
  • Survey Methodology
  • Sexual Assault Research
  • Gender Differences
  • Data Collection Strategies
  • Reporting Accuracy
  • Sexual Assault
  • Sexual Violence
  • Consent Violation
  • Non-Consensual Acts
  • Rape
  • Coercion
  • Trauma
  • Psychological Impact
  • Perpetrator Behavior
  • Sexual Coercion
  • Rape Culture
  • Victim Blaming
  • Trauma Recovery
  • Survivor Support
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Intimate Partner Violence
  • Relationship Violence
  • Victim Empowerment
  • Legal Protections
  • Sexual Abuse
  • Emotional Abuse
  • Abuse Recovery
  • Victim Advocacy
  • Consent Education
  • Rape Recovery
  • Sexual Misconduct
  • Trauma-Informed Care
  • Sexual Assault Prevention
  • Non-Consensual BDSM
  • Coercion in Relationships
  • Sexual Assault Laws
  • Victim Support Services
  • Restorative Justice
  • Psychological Trauma

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 29 | Issue : 4 | Page No : 364-373

Published On

December, 2005

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Abstract

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 assigned to one of two forms of a questionnaire. One form had the tactics used to obtain forced sex as the initial frame of reference, whereas the other form had the type of sex that was forced as the initial frame of reference. Seventy-five percent of the women who received the tactics-first version reported that they had at least one victimization experience since the age of 14, as compared to 62% of the women who received the type-of-sex-first version. Sixty-nine percent of the men who received the tactics-first version reported that they had at least one perpetration experience since the age of 14, as compared to 36% of the men who received the type-of-sex-first version. These findings have implications for how questionnaires should be designed to maximize reporting of sexual assault incidents.

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