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Dive into the research topics where Amanda N. Gesselman is active.

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Featured researches published by Amanda N. Gesselman.


Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy | 2017

Prevalence of Experiences With Consensual Nonmonogamous Relationships: Findings From Two National Samples of Single Americans

M. L. Haupert; Amanda N. Gesselman; Amy C. Moors; Helen E. Fisher; Justin R. Garcia

Although academic and popular interest in consensual nonmonogamy (CNM) is increasing, little is known about the prevalence of CNM. Using two separate U.S. Census based quota samples of single adults in the United States (Study 1: n = 3,905; Study 2: n = 4,813), the present studies show that more than one in five (21.9% in Study 1; 21.2% in Study 2) participants report engaging in CNM at some point in their lifetime. This proportion remained constant across age, education level, income, religion, region, political affiliation, and race, but varied with gender and sexual orientation. Specifically, men (compared to women) and people who identify as gay, lesbian, or bisexual (compared to those who identify as heterosexual) were more likely to report previous engagement in CNM. These findings suggest that a sizable and diverse proportion of U.S. adults have experienced CNM, highlighting the need to incorporate CNM into theoretical and empirical therapy and family science work.


Journal of Counselor Leadership and Advocacy | 2015

Exploring Perceptions of Social Justice Advocacy Competence Among School Counselors

Tylon M. Crook; Sheryl Stenger; Amanda N. Gesselman

With calls for professional school counselors to incorporate social justice advocacy into their roles and responsibilities, the purpose of this study was to examine perceived social justice advocacy competence among currently practicing school counselors. Analysis of the data indicated several variables associated with higher perceived competence with regard to social justice advocacy competence. The results have implications for practice and training of school counselors. Recommendations for future research are also explored.


Psycho-oncology | 2017

Spirituality, emotional distress, and post-traumatic growth in breast cancer survivors and their partners: an actor-partner interdependence modeling approach.

Amanda N. Gesselman; Silvia M. Bigatti; Justin R. Garcia; Kathryn Coe; David Cella; Victoria L. Champion

The association between spirituality and emotional health has been well documented in healthy individuals. A small literature has shown that spirituality plays a role in well‐being for some breast cancer (BC) survivors; however, this link is virtually unexplored in partners/spouses of survivors. The current study aimed to assess the relationship between spirituality, emotional distress, and post‐traumatic growth for BC survivors and their partners using a dyadic analyses approach.


Journal of Sex Research | 2017

Has Virginity Lost Its Virtue? Relationship Stigma Associated With Being a Sexually Inexperienced Adult

Amanda N. Gesselman; Gregory D. Webster; Justin R. Garcia

While virginity prior to marriage has been historically valued, changing sociosexual scripts in the United States have made premarital sexual activity the norm for young adults, with sexual debut generally occurring in late adolescence. In the current research, we examined the impact of being developmentally off-time with first coitus (i.e., not yet engaging in coitus when most same-aged peers have done so). Specifically, we investigated stigma toward sexually inexperienced adults and discrimination regarding romantic relationship formation. Across three methodologically diverse studies we observed that sexually inexperienced adults perceived themselves to be stigmatized due to their inexperience and that sexually inexperienced adults were not highly desired as relationship partners. Even sexually inexperienced adults themselves did not find other inexperienced adults to be attractive relationship partners. Although abstaining from sexual activity may bestow some health advantages, our studies show that being a sexual “late bloomer” may result in negative interpersonal consequences such as limited opportunities for romantic relationships.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2017

Epilepsy-related romantic and sexual relationship problems and concerns: Indications from Internet message boards

Wendy R. Miller; Amanda N. Gesselman; Justin R. Garcia; Doyle Groves; Janice M. Buelow

The objective of this study was to, utilizing a Big Data set and innovative methods, explore romantic and sexual relationship-related concerns among people with epilepsy and their partners. We applied Word Adjacency Graph modeling to more than 2000 message board posts, and five distinct categories of romantic and sexual relationship-related concerns emerged. We conclude that persons with epilepsy are at particular risk for the experience of decrements in their romantic and sexual relationships, which can negatively impact their self-management and overall health.


Evolutionary Psychology | 2012

Inclusive Fitness Affects Both Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior: Target Gender and Insult Domain Moderate the Link between Genetic Relatedness and Aggression

Amanda N. Gesselman; Gregory D. Webster

Although prior research has examined the relationship between genetic relatedness and helping behavior (Burnstein, Crandall, and Kitayama, 1994), less is known about its role in aggressive responses to insults (Fitzgerald and Ketterer, 2011). Drawing on inclusive fitness theory (Hamilton, 1964) and the Kinship, Acceptance, and Rejection Model of Altruism and Aggression (KARMAA; Webster, 2008; Webster et al., 2012), we designed a 2 (participant gender) × 2 (target gender) × 2 (insult: status vs. reproductive) × 3 (relatedness: stranger vs. cousin vs. sibling) between-person experiment in which 489 participants (a) read vignettes in which a stranger, cousin, or sibling was insulted and (b) reported their emotional reaction and retaliation likelihood (six-item α= .91) in response to the insult. Consistent with theory and prior research, men were significantly more aggressive than women, and people were significantly more aggressive responding to insults against kin than non-kin. These findings support theoretically-derived, dynamic, and domain-specific links among insults, gender, relatedness, and aggression.


Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences | 2018

Age-related patterns in sexual behaviors and attitudes among single U.S. Adults: An evolutionary approach.

Peter B. Gray; Justin R. Garcia; Amanda N. Gesselman

While a large body of research has sought to understand human longevity and caregiving (e.g., the grandmother hypothesis) from an evolutionary life history perspective, this same view has rarely been brought to bear on age-related changes in human sexuality. Moreover, much of the existing research on age-related patterns in human sexual behaviors and attitudes features samples of predominantly partnered individuals. Here, we test hypotheses concerning age- and sex-related differences in measures of sexuality among 1,522 single adults 21 years of age and older from throughout the United States. Consistent with expectations, we document age-related decreases in sexual behavior, ideal frequency of sexual behavior, perceived changes in sexual desire, and openness to an array of sexual behaviors (e.g., having sex with multiple partners), although sexual satisfaction increased with age in women but not men. Also consistent with expectations, men reported more frequent sexual behavior, ideal frequency of sexual behavior, greater perceived change in sexual motivation, and more openness to various sexual behaviors (e.g., a one-night stand) compared to women. Conversely, women reported higher sexual satisfaction and were more open to getting married than men. Interaction effects were also observed, including between age and sex on sexual satisfaction, with older women reporting relatively higher sexual satisfaction than older men. We place these findings in the wider body of research on human sexuality, contrasting this evolutionary life history approach with prevailing descriptive or biomedical foci on age-related sexual dysfunction.


Women's Reproductive Health | 2017

Variance in Mood Symptoms Across Menstrual Cycles: Implications for Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder

Tierney Lorenz; Amanda N. Gesselman; Virginia J. Vitzthum

Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) remains a controversial diagnosis: Some authors have argued that it pathologizes normal mood changes, and others have questioned the need for daily mood reports across multiple cycles. In the present study, we examined changes in mood among psychologically healthy young participants with regular menstrual cycles. We collected daily reports of negative mood (depression, nervousness, irritability, and fatigue) across two to six consecutive cycles from 27 participants aged 18-35 years, and we used variance decomposition analyses to examine how much of the variance in these daily reports was due to day, cycle, and individual. The majority of variance (79%-98%) was due to daily fluctuations and did not conform to a standard pattern of premenstrual rise/postmenstrual fall. These findings suggest that PMDD is not simply an exaggeration of mood patterns typical for psychologically healthy people. Individual patterns were relatively stable from cycle to cycle; thus tracking deviations from a patients own normative mood patterns may have greater clinical utility than deviation from a presumptive norm.


Evolutionary Psychology | 2014

A Life History Theory of Father Absence and Menarche: A Meta-Analysis

Gregory D. Webster; Julia A. Graber; Amanda N. Gesselman; Benjamin S. Crosier; Tatiana Orozco Schember


Personality and Individual Differences | 2014

Mutually attracted or repulsed? Actor–partner interdependence models of Dark Triad traits and relationship outcomes

C. Veronica Smith; Benjamin W. Hadden; Gregory D. Webster; Peter K. Jonason; Amanda N. Gesselman; Laura C. Crysel

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Justin R. Garcia

Indiana University Bloomington

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Amy C. Moors

Indiana University Bloomington

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