Lauren A. Reed
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lauren A. Reed.
Violence Against Women | 2016
Lauren A. Reed; Richard M. Tolman; L. Monique Ward
Digital dating abuse (DDA) is a pattern of behaviors that control, pressure, or threaten a dating partner using a cell phone or the Internet. A survey of 365 college students was conducted, finding that digital monitoring behaviors were especially common. There were no gender differences in number of DDA behaviors experienced, but women reported more negative hypothetical reactions to sexual messaging than men. DDA was associated with measures of physical, sexual, and psychological dating violence. Results suggest that digital media are a context for potentially harmful dating behaviors, and the experience of DDA may differ by gender for sexual behaviors.
Emerging adulthood | 2016
Rita C. Seabrook; L. Monique Ward; Lauren A. Reed; Adriana M. Manago; Soraya Giaccardi; Julia R. Lippman
The heterosexual script describes the set of complementary but unequal roles for women and men to follow in their romantic and sexual interactions. The heterosexual script is comprised of the sexual double standard (men want sex and women set sexual limits), courtship strategies (men attract women with power and women attract men through beauty and sexiness), and commitment strategies (men avoid commitment and women prioritize relationships). Despite evidence that women and men are aware of this script, and it is prominent in the media, there is no existing measure of endorsement of the heterosexual script. In Studies 1 and 2, we develop and validate a measure of endorsement of the heterosexual script. In Study 3, we demonstrate that television consumption predicts stronger endorsement of the heterosexual script. We discuss the implications of endorsement of the heterosexual script for sexual health and provide suggestions for future research using this scale.
Journal of Adolescence | 2017
Lauren A. Reed; Richard M. Tolman; L. Monique Ward
Digital dating abuse (DDA) behaviors include the use of digital media to monitor, control, threaten, harass, pressure, or coerce a dating partner. In this study, 703 high school students reported on the frequency of DDA victimization, whether they were upset by these incidents, and how they responded. Results suggest that although both girls and boys experienced DDA at similar rates of frequency (with the exception of sexual coercion), girls reported that they were more upset by these behaviors. Girls also expressed more negative emotional responses to DDA victimization than boys. Although DDA is potentially harmful for all youth, gender matters. These findings suggest that the experience and consequences of DDA may be particularly detrimental for girls.
Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2017
Emily Hanna; L. Monique Ward; Rita C. Seabrook; Morgan C. Jerald; Lauren A. Reed; Soraya Giaccardi; Julia R. Lippman
Although Facebook was created to help people feel connected with each other, data indicate that regular usage has both negative and positive connections to well-being. To explore these mixed results, we tested the role of social comparison and self-objectification as possible mediators of the link between Facebook use and three facets of psychological well-being: self-esteem, mental health, and body shame. Participants were 1,104 undergraduate women and men who completed surveys assessing their Facebook usage (minutes, passive use, and active use), social comparison, self-objectification, and well-being. Data were analyzed using structural equation modeling, testing separate models for women and men. Models for each gender fit the data well. For women and men, Facebook use was associated with greater social comparison and greater self-objectification, which, in turn, was each related to lower self-esteem, poorer mental health, and greater body shame. Mediated models provided better fits to the data than models testing direct pathways to the mediators and well-being variables. Implications are discussed for young peoples social media use, and future directions are provided.
Sex Roles | 2015
Adriana M. Manago; L. Monique Ward; Kristi M. Lemm; Lauren A. Reed; Rita C. Seabrook
Sex Roles | 2016
L. Monique Ward; Rita C. Seabrook; Adriana M. Manago; Lauren A. Reed
Computers in Human Behavior | 2015
Lauren A. Reed; Richard M. Tolman; Paige Safyer
Archive | 2014
L. Monique Ward; Lauren A. Reed; Sarah L. Trinh; Monica Foust
Computers in Human Behavior | 2016
Lauren A. Reed; Richard M. Tolman; L. Monique Ward; Paige Safyer
American Journal of Community Psychology | 2017
Jill D. Sharkey; Lauren A. Reed; Erika D. Felix