Promoting Anti-Rape Attitudes in Young Men Through the Repetition-Induced Truth Effect
Promoting Anti-Rape Attitudes in Young Men Through the Repetition-Induced Truth Effect
Evelyn Schapansky Arne Roets Jonas De keersmaecker Christophe Vandeviver a Ghent University, Ghent, Belgiumb Research Foundation—Flanders (FWO), Brussels, Belgiumc IE Business School, Madrid, SpainEvelyn Schapansky is an interdisciplinary PhD candidate in Criminology and Psychology at Ghent University. Her PhD research focuses on protective factors against rape perpetration using quantitative and experimental methods. Her research interests include sexual victimization and perpetration, their risk and protective factors, and the role of gender-related attitudes in sexual violence perpetration and prevention.Arne Roets is an Associate Professor in Social Psychology. His work focuses on social attitudes, including gender and racial biases, as well as various aspects of moral, social, and political judgment and decision-making. He is an elected Fellow of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, and combines a wide range of methodological approaches in his research.Jonas De keersmaecker is an Assistant Professor in the department of Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour at IE University. His research examines reasoning processes within today’s globalized and digital business landscape and society, focusing on two main areas: (1) the cognitive antecedents of attitudes towards diversity and ideological beliefs, and (2) truth judgments and misinformation.Christophe Vandeviver is a research professor of criminology at Ghent University and an international research fellow at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR). His research interests include computational and quantitative criminology, spatial and temporal dimensions of crime and crime control, offender behavior, crime networks, and violence victimization.