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Featured researches published by Elise Holland.


Psychological Medicine | 2012

Categories versus dimensions in personality and psychopathology: a quantitative review of taxometric research

Nick Haslam; Elise Holland; Peter Kuppens

Taxometric research methods were developed by Paul Meehl and colleagues to distinguish between categorical and dimensional models of latent variables. We have conducted a comprehensive review of published taxometric research that included 177 articles, 311 distinct findings and a combined sample of 533 377 participants. Multilevel logistic regression analyses have examined the methodological and substantive variables associated with taxonic (categorical) findings. Although 38.9% of findings were taxonic, these findings were much less frequent in more recent and methodologically stronger studies, and in those reporting comparative fit indices based on simulated comparison data. When these and other possible confounds were statistically controlled, the true prevalence of taxonic findings was estimated at 14%. The domains of normal personality, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, eating disorders, externalizing disorders, and personality disorders (PDs) other than schizotypal yielded little persuasive evidence of taxa. Promising but still not definitive evidence of psychological taxa was confined to the domains of schizotypy, substance use disorders and autism. This review indicates that most latent variables of interest to psychiatrists and personality and clinical psychologists are dimensional, and that many influential taxonic findings of early taxometric research are likely to be spurious.


Psychology of Women Quarterly | 2013

Worth the Weight The Objectification of Overweight Versus Thin Targets

Elise Holland; Nick Haslam

Although the negative ramifications of others objectifying the female body are well established, little research has examined whether certain portrayals of women are more susceptible to being objectified. The present study sought to examine the effect of two target characteristics—body size and clothing style—on objectification. One hundred and ninety-one Australian undergraduate participants (95 female; M age = 19.35 years) viewed either an image of an overweight woman or a thin woman, who was either dressed in plain clothes or lingerie. Participants then completed three tasks measuring their objectification of the woman to include attributions of mind, attributions of moral status, and a dot probe task assessing attention towards the target’s body relative to the face. Results indicate that overweight women, as well as those dressed in plain clothing, were attributed more agentic mental states and moral value, as well as elicited less of the objectifying gaze, than thin targets and those wearing lingerie. These findings suggest that contrary to popular opinion, there may be unforeseen benefits of being overweight.


Archive | 2012

Attitudes Towards Asylum Seekers: The Australian Experience

Nick Haslam; Elise Holland

Australian public opinion towards asylum seekers has often been unwelcoming at best and hostile at worst. This chapter examines the psychological underpinnings of these negative sentiments, exploring the demographic, ideological and personality factors associated with them, and the multiple, interwoven components of them. We examine the extent to which antipathy towards asylum seekers reflects racism, nationalism, social norms and a variety of emotional dynamics (fear, anger and disgust) and close with an examination of the ways in which asylum seekers are represented as less than human. Implications for changing public sentiment are discussed.


Psychology of Women Quarterly | 2016

Cute Little Things The Objectification of Prepubescent Girls

Elise Holland; Nick Haslam

In two studies, we examined the impact of sexualization of prepubescent girls on college students’ perceptions of girls’ mental capacity and moral standing. Previous research has shown that women depicted in sexualized and other body-focused ways are perceived as lacking mental capacities and moral standing; these perceptions reduce concern about them when they are victimized. However, no other research to date has examined whether the same effects hold for young girls. Study 1 demonstrated that college students attributed lower mental capacity and lower moral status to girls dressed in revealing attire in the same way, and to the same degree, as they viewed sexually mature women. In Study 2, we replicated this finding and found that objectifying perceptions are associated with less sympathetic responses to girls in a bullying scenario. Participants showed less care that sexually objectified girls had been harmed, less favorable attitudes towards helping them, and a greater belief that the girls were responsible for being victimized. Taken together, these findings suggest that the potentially damaging manifestations and consequences of objectification are manifest before girls reach womanhood. We suggest recommendations for reducing the sexualization of young girls. Additional online materials for this article are available to PWQ subscribers on PWQ’s website at http://pwq.sagepub.com/supplemental


New Media & Society | 2018

Social media is not real life: The effect of attaching disclaimer-type labels to idealized social media images on women’s body image and mood

Jasmine Fardouly; Elise Holland

This online experimental study examined the impact of viewing disclaimer comments attached to idealized social media images on 18- to 25-year-old American women’s (N = 164) body dissatisfaction, mood, and perceptions of the target. Furthermore, this study also tested whether thin ideal internalization or appearance comparison tendency moderated any effect. Viewing idealized images taken from social media had a negative influence on women’s body image, with or without the presence of disclaimers. Disclaimer comments also had no impact on women’s mood. They did, however, impact perceptions of the target, with women forming a less positive impression of the target if she attached disclaimer comments to her social media images. Thus, the results of this study suggest that the use of disclaimer comments or labels on social media may be ineffective at reducing women’s body dissatisfaction.


Psychology of Women Quarterly | 2018

Revisiting the Jezebel Stereotype: The Impact of Target Race on Sexual Objectification

Joel R. Anderson; Elise Holland; Courtney M. Heldreth; Scott P. Johnson

The overt objectification and dehumanization of Black people has a long history throughout the Western world. However, few researchers have explored whether such perceptions still persist implicitly and whether Black women are sexually objectified at an interpersonal level. We sought to address this gap by exploring whether Black women are sexually objectified to a greater extent than White women and whether target sexualization exacerbates this effect. In Study 1, using eye-tracking technology (N = 38), we provide evidence that individuals attend more often, and for longer durations, to the sexual body parts of Black women compared to White women, particularly when presented in a sexualized manner. In Studies 2a (N = 120) and 2b (N = 131), we demonstrated that Black women are implicitly associated with both animals and objects to a greater degree than White women with a Go/No-Go Association Task. We discuss the implications of such dehumanizing treatment of Black people and Black women in U.S. society. We hope that this evidence will increase awareness that objectification can happen outside the realm of conscious thought and that related interventions ought to include an ethnicity-specific component. Additional online materials for this article, including online slides for instructors who want to use this article for teaching, are available on PWQs website at http://journals.sagepub.com/page/pwq/suppl/index


Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation | 2013

The psychology of humanness

Nick Haslam; Steve Loughnan; Elise Holland


Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy | 2014

The Not-So-Common-Wealth of Australia: Evidence for a Cross-Cultural Desire for a More Equal Distribution of Wealth

Michael I. Norton; David Neal; Cassandra L. Govan; Dan Ariely; Elise Holland


Revue internationale de psychologie sociale | 2015

Exploring the role of culture in sexual objectification: A seven nations study

Steve Loughnan; Silvia Fernandez-Campos; Jeroen Vaes; Gulnaz Anjum; Mudassar Aziz; Chika Harada; Elise Holland; Indramani Singh; Elisa Puvia; Koji Tsuchiya


British Journal of Social Psychology | 2017

Sexual objectification in women's daily lives: A smartphone ecological momentary assessment study

Elise Holland; Peter Koval; Michelle Stratemeyer; Fiona Thomson; Nick Haslam

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Nick Haslam

University of Melbourne

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Joel R. Anderson

Australian Catholic University

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