Ha! I recognize those paper dolls. Thank you Jaimie for taking on this important and understudied topic #FemaleAggression
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Me + @A__Rankin seeing that MARTIE HASELTON commented on our research. (And we most definitely used those very same paper dolls!)pic.twitter.com/0WDjpm1lOk
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Any thoughts on modifying this for use as an aggression paradigm? Imho, aggression researchers have been for years discussing developing more ecologically valid measures of female aggression but this hasnt translated into any new behavioral measures
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We measured aggression-avoidance behavior (S2, 3, behavioral intent in S4), but people like
@tvaillancourt13 have measured aggressive behavior (Vaillancourt & Sharma, 2011), +@j4mi3p is working on evoking it. Happy to work w you and/or chat more on this!
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Very cool—and just in time to make it in to my lecture on women’s intrasexual competition and status!

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I'm covering aggression in my social psych course today and have to add this information now, too
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Cool! Can we study cultural change in dress patterns?
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Relatedly, there are some studies by Nigel Barber in the early 2000s that looked at how fluctuations in sex ratio in the US are correlated with skirt length

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Do you think this is global or just in the US? I mean there are lots of cultural differences in dressing up and also the amount of equality between the two sexes varies greatly.
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Good question! We’d expect some variation to be sure. E.g., we might see less variation (and perhaps no effect) in more gender-unequal cultures, where women’s clothes are more “regulated.” (SPPS is ltd to 5K words, or we’d have thought about a constraints on generality section.)
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