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Dive into the research topics where Kathryn E. Gallagher is active.

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Featured researches published by Kathryn E. Gallagher.


Aggressive Behavior | 2010

Power of being present: the role of mindfulness on the relation between men's alcohol use and sexual aggression toward intimate partners

Kathryn E. Gallagher; Adam D. Hudepohl; Dominic J. Parrott

The primary aim of this investigation was to examine the association between mens level of mindfulness and histories of alcohol consumption and sexual aggression toward intimate partners. Participants were 167 heterosexual drinking males who completed self-report measures of mindfulness, frequency and quantity of alcohol consumption during the past 12 months and sexual aggression against intimate partners during the past 12 months. Results indicated that a history of consuming larger amounts when drinking was associated with more frequent sexual coercion/aggression among men who reported low, but not high, levels of mindfulness. However, drinking more frequently by itself was not associated with more frequent sexual coercion/aggression. These results support the attention-allocation model and suggest implications for future intervention research aimed at reducing alcohol-related aggression.


Violence Against Women | 2011

What Accounts for Men’s Hostile Attitudes Toward Women? The Influence of Hegemonic Male Role Norms and Masculine Gender Role Stress

Kathryn E. Gallagher; Dominic J. Parrott

This study examined masculine gender role stress (MGRS) as a mediator of the relation between adherence to dimensions of a hegemonic masculinity and hostility toward women (HTW). Among a sample of 338 heterosexual men, results indicated that MGRS mediated the relation between adherence to the status and antifemininity norms, but not the toughness norm, and HTW. Adherence to the toughness norm maintained a positive association with HTW. These findings suggest that men’s HTW develops via multiple pathways that are associated with different norms of hegemonic masculinity. Implications for the prediction of men’s aggression against women are discussed.


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2010

The link between alcohol use and aggression toward sexual minorities: An event-based analysis

Dominic J. Parrott; Kathryn E. Gallagher; Wilson Vincent; Roger Bakeman

The current study used an event-based assessment approach to examine the day-to-day relationship between heterosexual mens alcohol consumption and perpetration of aggression toward sexual minorities. Participants were 199 heterosexual drinking men between the ages of 18-30 who completed (1) separate timeline followback interviews to assess alcohol use and aggression toward sexual minorities during the past year, and (2) written self-report measures of risk factors for aggression toward sexual minorities. Results indicated that aggression toward sexual minorities was twice as likely on a day when drinking was reported than on nondrinking days, with over 80% of alcohol-related aggressive acts perpetrated within the group context. Patterns of alcohol use (i.e., number of drinking days, mean drinks per drinking day, number of heavy drinking days) were not associated with perpetration after controlling for demographic variables and pertinent risk factors. Results suggest that it is the acute effects of alcohol, and not mens patterns of alcohol consumption, that facilitate aggression toward sexual minorities. More importantly, these data are the first to support an event-based link between alcohol use and aggression toward sexual minorities (or any minority group), and provide the impetus for future research to examine risk factors and mechanisms for intoxicated aggression toward sexual minorities and other stigmatized groups.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2012

Liquid Courage or Liquid Fear: Alcohol Intoxication and Anxiety Facilitate Physical Aggression

Dominic J. Parrott; Kathryn E. Gallagher; Amos Zeichner

Participants were 138 male social drinkers between 18 and 30 years of age from a university community in the southeastern United States in 2000. Trait and state anxiety was measured using the Trait Anxiety Inventory and the Facial Action Coding System, respectively. Participants consumed an alcoholic or nonalcoholic control beverage and completed a shock-based aggression task. Regression analysis indicated that alcohol-facilitated elevations in anxiety mediated the relation between alcohol consumption and aggression and that trait anxiety and physical provocation moderated this effect. Implications and limitations of this study are noted and future research directions are suggested.


Psychological Assessment | 2015

Development of the Abbreviated Masculine Gender Role Stress Scale.

Kevin M. Swartout; Dominic J. Parrott; Amy M. Cohn; Brett T. Hagman; Kathryn E. Gallagher

Data gathered from 6 independent samples (n = 1,729) that assessed mens masculine gender role stress in college and community males were aggregated used to determine the reliability and validity of an abbreviated version of the Masculine Gender Role Stress (MGRS) Scale. The 15 items with the highest item-to-total scale correlations were used to create an abbreviated MGRS Scale. Psychometric properties of each of the 15 items were examined with item response theory (IRT) analysis, using the discrimination and threshold parameters. IRT results showed that the abbreviated scale may hold promise at capturing the same amount of information as the full 40-item scale. Relative to the 40-item scale, the total score of the abbreviated MGRS Scale demonstrated comparable convergent validity using the measurement domains of masculine identity, hypermasculinity, trait anger, anger expression, and alcohol involvement. An abbreviated MGRS Scale may be recommended for use in clinical practice and research settings to reduce cost, time, and patient/participant burden. Additionally, IRT analyses identified items with higher discrimination and threshold parameters that may be used to screen for problematic gender role stress in men who may be seen in routine clinical or medical practice.


Addictive Behaviors | 2016

Reducing alcohol-related aggression: effects of a self-awareness manipulation and locus of control in heavy drinking males

Danielle M. Purvis; Kathryn E. Gallagher; Dominic J. Parrott

Alcohol Myopia Theory (AMT; Steele & Josephs, 1990) purports that alcohol facilitates aggression by narrowing attentional focus onto salient and instigatory cues common to conflict situations. However, few tests of its counterintuitive prediction - that alcohol may decrease aggression when inhibitory cues are most salient - have been conducted. The present study examined whether an AMT-inspired self-awareness intervention manipulation would reduce heavy drinking mens intoxicated aggression toward women and also examined whether a relevant individual variable, locus of control, would moderate this effect. Participants were 102 intoxicated male heavy drinkers who completed a self-report measure of locus of control and completed the Taylor Aggression Paradigm (Taylor, 1967). In this task, participants administered electric shocks to, and received electric shocks from, a fictitious female opponent while exposed to an environment saturated with or devoid of self-awareness cues. Results indicated that the self-awareness manipulation was associated with less alcohol-related aggression toward the female confederate for men who reported an internal, but not an external, locus of control. Findings support AMT as a theoretical framework to inform preventative interventions for alcohol-related aggression and highlight the importance of individual differences in receptivity to such interventions.


Sex Roles | 2008

What Accounts for Heterosexual Women’s Negative Emotional Responses to Lesbians?: Examination of Traditional Gender Role Beliefs and Sexual Prejudice

Dominic J. Parrott; Kathryn E. Gallagher


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2011

Does Distraction Reduce the Alcohol―Aggression Relation? A Cognitive and Behavioral Test of the Attention-Allocation Model

Kathryn E. Gallagher; Dominic J. Parrott


Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs | 2010

Influence of Heavy Episodic Drinking on the Relation Between Men's Locus of Control and Aggression Toward Intimate Partners

Kathryn E. Gallagher; Dominic J. Parrott


Psychology of Violence | 2014

Effects of Thought Suppression on Provoked Men's Alcohol-Related Physical Aggression in the Laboratory.

Kathryn E. Gallagher; Claire G. Lisco; Dominic J. Parrott; Peter R. Giancola

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Amy M. Cohn

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Brett T. Hagman

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Roger Bakeman

Georgia State University

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