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Dive into the research topics where Danielle R. Probst is active.

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Featured researches published by Danielle R. Probst.


Journal of Sex Research | 2010

Personality, Sexuality, and Substance Use as Predictors of Sexual Risk Taking in College Students

Jessica A. Turchik; John P. Garske; Danielle R. Probst; Clinton R. Irvin

Sexual risk taking among college students is common and can lead to serious consequences, such as unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections. This study utilized responses from 310 undergraduate psychology students aged 18 to 23 to examine personality, sexuality, and substance use predictors of sexual risk behaviors over a six-month period. Data were collected from 2005 to 2006 at a medium-sized Midwestern U.S. university. Results indicated that greater alcohol and recreational drug use, higher extraversion, and lower agreeableness were related to sexual risk taking in men. For women, greater alcohol and drug use, higher sexual excitation, and lower sexual inhibition were predictive of sexual risk taking. Among women, but not men, sensation seeking was found to mediate the relationship between the four significant substance use, personality, and sexuality variables and sexual risk taking. Implications for sexual risk behavior prevention and intervention programming are discussed.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2007

Factors Predicting the Type of Tactics Used to Resist Sexual Assault: A Prospective Study of College Women

Jessica A. Turchik; Danielle R. Probst; Minna Chau; Amy Nigoff; Christine A. Gidycz

The purpose of the current study was to examine how womens intentions, as well as psychological and situational factors, predicted the actual use of resistance tactics in response to a sexual assault situation over a 2-month follow-up period. Twenty-eight percent of the 378 undergraduate women who participated at the baseline assessment and returned for the follow-up session 8 weeks later were victimized over the interim period. The results suggested that womens reported use of verbally assertive tactics was predicted by the intention to use verbally assertive tactics, concern about injury, greater confidence, and feelings of being isolated or controlled by the perpetrator. The use of physically assertive tactics was predicted by increased severity of the attack, greater confidence, and feelings of being isolated or controlled by the perpetrator. The use of nonforceful tactics was predicted by intentions to use nonforceful tactics, increased self-consciousness, knowing the perpetrator prior to the assault, fears of losing the relationship with the perpetrator, and no history of childhood sexual victimization. These findings have important implications in sexual assault risk-reduction programming.


Psychotherapy | 2010

Enhancing supervisee reflectivity in clinical supervision: a case study illustration.

Lindsay M. Orchowski; Nicole M. Evangelista; Danielle R. Probst

Reflectivity has been described as the cyclical process whereby individuals engage in a critical evaluation of their affective, cognitive, and behavioral experiences to produce insight and fundamental shifts in their original beliefs. Developing reflectivity in supervisees is one of the most challenging, yet important, responsibilities of clinical supervisors, given its link to such skills as critical thinking, ethical decision making, and problem solving. This paper advances the literature by presenting a case example that demonstrates how reflectivity can be emphasized in clinical supervision, highlighting the barriers to reflectivity, and providing strategies that supervisors can utilize to encourage reflectivity within clinical supervision. The strategies and information discussed may be flexibly applied to supervisees of all developmental levels within the context of individual supervision.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2009

Prediction of Sexual Assault Experiences in College Women Based on Rape Scripts: A Prospective Analysis

Jessica A. Turchik; Danielle R. Probst; Clinton R. Irvin; Minna Chau; Christine A. Gidycz

Although script theory has been applied to sexual assault (e.g., H. Frith & C. Kitzinger, 2001; A. S. Kahn, V. A. Andreoli Mathie, & C. Torgler, 1994), womens scripts of rape have not been examined in relation to predicting sexual victimization experiences. The purpose of the current study was to examine how elements of womens sexual assault scripts predicted their sexual assault experiences over a follow-up period. The authors used data from a baseline and follow-up session for 339 undergraduate women. The results suggest that women who constructed narratives containing certain elements were more likely to report a sexual assault over the academic quarter. Specifically, narratives containing the woman utilizing nonforceful resistance, the woman having less control over the outcome of the situation, the assault happening outdoors, the assault being more severe, and the woman having known the perpetrator less time were predictive of reported sexual victimization over the 8-week follow-up period. Additionally, having a history of adolescent sexual victimization was also predictive of reported sexual victimization over the quarter. These findings have important implications in sexual assault risk-reduction programming, which are discussed.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2013

Women’s Reactions to Interpersonal Violence Research: A Longitudinal Study

Katie M. Edwards; Danielle R. Probst; Erin C. Tansill; Christine A. Gidycz

This study assessed women’s immediate and long-term reactions to completing self-report measures of interpersonal violence. College women completed surveys at the beginning and end of a 2-month academic quarter for course credit. Results showed that 7.7% of participants experienced immediate negative emotional reactions to research participation. Greater immediate negative reactions were related to interpersonal victimization and psychological distress variables. Attrition from the study over the 2-month follow-up was not predicted by participants’ immediate negative emotional reactions to the research or anticipation of future distress. Of the participants who returned for the follow-up, 2.1% of participants reported experiencing distress over the interim period as a result of their initial participation in the study. These long-term reactions were bivariately related to a number of victimization, psychological distress, and reaction variables measured at the first study session. However, in the regression analyses, only immediate negative emotional reactions to the research and anticipation of future distress predicted long-term negative emotional reactions.


Journal of American College Health | 2012

A Qualitative Analysis of College Women's Leaving Processes in Abusive Relationships

Katie M. Edwards; Megan J. Murphy; Erin C. Tansill; Christina Myrick; Danielle R. Probst; Rebecca Corsa; Christine A. Gidycz

Abstract Objective: This study assessed the process of leaving an abusive dating relationship utilizing a qualitative design. Methods: Participants included 123 college women in abusive dating relationships who participated at the beginning and end of a 10-week academic quarter. Results: Qualitative content analyses were used to analyze the transcribed responses to an open-ended question about womens leaving processes over the interim period. A variety of categories and themes emerged for women in different stages of the leaving process, consistent with the Transtheoretical Model of Change and Investment Model. Data also underscored womens lack of acknowledgment, minimization, and normalization of abuse. Conclusions: These data demonstrate the importance of dating violence intervention and prevention programming on college campuses and offer information that may be useful to college health providers who assist women in abusive dating relationships.


Violence Against Women | 2015

Concurrent Administration of Sexual Assault Prevention and Risk Reduction Programming Outcomes for Women

Christine A. Gidycz; Lindsay M. Orchowski; Danielle R. Probst; Katie M. Edwards; Megan J. Murphy; Erin C. Tansill

The present study describes the 4- and 7-month postintervention outcomes of a sexual assault risk reduction program for women, which was part of an evaluation that included a prevention program for men. Relative to the control group, participants evidenced more relational sexual assertiveness and self-protective behavior, and were more likely to indicate that they utilized active verbal and physical self-defense strategies. Whether or not women experienced subsequent victimization did not differ between groups. Relative to control group women who were victimized, program participants who were victimized between the 4- and 7-month follow-up blamed the perpetrator more and evidenced less self-blame.


Child Maltreatment | 2014

Multiplicity of Child Maltreatment and Biopsychosocial Outcomes in Young Adulthood The Moderating Role of Resiliency Characteristics Among Female Survivors

Katie M. Edwards; Danielle R. Probst; Kara Anne Rodenhizer-Stämpfli; Christine A. Gidycz; Erin C. Tansill

This study examined the moderating role of resiliency characteristics in the relationship between multiplicity of child maltreatment and biopsychosocial outcomes (i.e., psychological, physical, and interpersonal distress) in young adulthood. Participants included 765 college women who completed surveys. Structural equation modeling showed that resiliency characteristics moderated the relationship between multiplicity of child maltreatment and psychological distress; at high levels of resiliency characteristics, there was a nonsignificant relationship between multiplicity of child maltreatment and psychological distress. There was no evidence of moderation for physical or interpersonal distress. However, for both interpersonal and physical distress, the main effects of multiplicity of child maltreatment were positively related to each form of distress, and the main effect of resiliency characteristics was negatively related to each form of distress. These findings underscore the importance of promoting resiliency characteristics among survivors of multiplicity of child maltreatment to promote optimal functioning.


Psychology of Violence | 2010

Prediction of sexual assault experiences in college women based on rape scripts: A prospective analysis

Jessica A. Turchik; Danielle R. Probst; Clinton R. Irvin; Minna Chau; Christine A. Gidycz

This reprinted article originally appeared in Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, Vol. 77, (No. 2), 361–366. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2009-03774-017). Although script theory has been applied to sexual assault (e.g., H. Frith & C. Kitzinger, 2001; A. S. Kahn, V. A. Andreoli Mathie, & C. Torgler, 1994), womens scripts of rape have not been examined in relation to predicting sexual victimization experiences. The purpose of the current study was to examine how elements of womens sexual assault scripts predicted their sexual assault experiences over a follow-up period. The authors used data from a baseline and follow-up session for 339 undergraduate women. The results suggest that women who constructed narratives containing certain elements were more likely to report a sexual assault over the academic quarter. Specifically, narratives containing the woman utilizing nonforceful resistance, the woman having less control over the outcome of the situation, the assault happening outdoors, the assault being more severe, and the woman having known the perpetrator less time were predictive of reported sexual victimization over the 8-week follow-up period. Additionally, having a history of adolescent sexual victimization was also predictive of reported sexual victimization over the quarter. These findings have important implications in sexual assault risk-reduction programming, which are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)


Psychotherapy Research | 2009

An assimilation analysis of clinician-assisted emotional disclosure therapy with survivors of intimate partner sexual assault

Lindsay M. Orchowski; Brian D. Uhlin; Danielle R. Probst; Katie M. Edwards; Timothy Anderson

Abstract This study examined clinician-assisted emotional disclosure therapy among college women with a history of intimate partner sexual assault. Assimilation analysis, a method for tracking client movement in psychotherapy, was used to document changes in dominant and submissive voices during clients’ disclosure of the trauma. Self-blame, traditional gender-role assumptions, and internalized rape myth ideology emerged as prominent themes in clients’ formations of problem statements. The two case studies presented illustrate the difficulty in clearly formulating experiences of intimate partner sexual assault as problematic, integrating submissive and dominant voices and empowering adaptive voices that speak for the well-being and self-assertion of the individual. Implications for psychotherapy with survivors of intimate partner sexual assault are discussed.

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Jessica A. Turchik

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System

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Katie M. Edwards

University of New Hampshire

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