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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Ioverno is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Ioverno.


Psicothema | 2014

Suicidal ideation in Spanish and Italian lesbian and gay young adults: the role of internalized sexual stigma

Roberto Baiocco; Salvatore Ioverno; Rita Cerutti; Federica Santamaria; Lilybeth Fontanesi; Vittorio Lingiardi; Emma Baumgartner; Fiorenzo Laghi

BACKGROUND A growing body of research claims that sexual minority individuals have nearly twice the suicidal ideation rate of heterosexual individuals. METHOD The main objective of the current study was to test a model wherein internalized sexual stigma (ISS) mediates the association between some gay-related stressors and suicidal ideation. The present cross-sectional survey involved two samples of lesbian and gay young adults from Spain (N = 209) and Italy (N = 345). The total sample included 316 gay men and 228 lesbian women. Path analysis was used to test the direct and indirect (mediated) effects of the variables from different domains on repulsion by life. RESULTS In both the Spanish and Italian samples, past victimization experiences and ISS had a significant direct effect on repulsion by life. In both samples, ISS acted as a significant mediator in the effect of the concealment of ones sexual orientation and the religious involvement of repulsion by life. CONCLUSION The current study indicates that ISS is a potential moderator of the effect of concealing ones sexual orientation, religious involvement, and past experiences of victimization on suicidal attitudes.


Archives of Suicide Research | 2015

Suicidal Ideation among Italian and Spanish Young Adults: The Role of Sexual Orientation

Roberto Baiocco; Salvatore Ioverno; Antonia Lonigro; Emma Baumgartner; Fiorenzo Laghi

The purpose of the current study was to identify demographic, social, and psychological variables associated with suicidal ideation in an Italian sample and a Spanish sample, taking into account the relevance of sexual orientation as a risk factor for suicide. Three hundred twenty gay and bisexual men, 396 heterosexual men, 281 lesbians and bisexual women, and 835 heterosexual women were recruited. In chi-square and multivariable logistic regression analyses we identified several consistent cross-national risk factors for suicidal ideation: having lower education, not being religious, being homosexual or bisexual, not being engaged in a stable relationship, having lower level of peer and parental attachment, and having depressive symptoms. Interestingly, the strongest risk factor in both samples, after depression symptoms, was sexual orientation.


Psychology of sexual orientation and gender diversity | 2016

The Protective Role of Gay-Straight Alliances for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Questioning Students: A Prospective Analysis.

Salvatore Ioverno; Alexander B. Belser; Roberto Baiocco; Arnold H. Grossman; Stephen T. Russell

Prior studies show a strong association between gay-straight alliances (GSAs) and the well-being and safety of sexual minority students at school. However, nearly all existing literature has relied on cross-sectional data. Using data from the first two panels of a multi-site longitudinal study on risk and protective factors for suicide among lesbian, gay, bisexual, and questioning (LGBQ) youth in three U.S. cities, we examined the influence of presence of and participation in a GSA on perceptions of safety at school, homophobic bullying experiences, and psychosocial adjustment (depression and self-esteem) in 327 LGBQ students across two school years. LGBQ students who had GSAs in their schools or were members of GSAs in the prior year showed no differences in psychological adjustment, but they reported perceptions of more school safety and less homophobic bullying in the following school year. Further, changes in GSA presence (gaining a GSA) and changes in participation (from non-participation to participation) were independently associated with stronger perceived safety in the subsequent school year. This study provides the first prospective evidence of the lasting positive role of GSAs for high school students, and documents that changes in GSA presence and participation are associated with safety at school. Education policy and practice implications are discussed.


the Journal of Beliefs and Values | 2014

The Psychometric Properties of the Italian Translation of the Francis Scale of Attitude toward Christianity: A Study among Catholic Adolescents

Giuseppe Crea; Roberto Baiocco; Salvatore Ioverno; Gabriele Buzzi; Leslie J. Francis

The Italian translation of the Francis Scale of Attitude toward Christianity was developed and tested among a sample of 575 young people between 16 and 17 years of age attending secular secondary schools in Rome, Italy. The data supported the unidimensionality, internal consistency reliability and construct validity of this instrument and commend it for further use in contributing to comparative empirical research within the psychology of religion.


European Journal of Developmental Psychology | 2017

Same-sex parent families in Italy: Validation of the Coparenting Scale-Revised for lesbian mothers and gay fathers

Nicola Carone; Roberto Baiocco; Salvatore Ioverno; Antonio Chirumbolo; Vittorio Lingiardi

Abstract Even though Italy is still struggling to establish equal rights and access to assisted reproduction techniques for sexual minorities, an increasing number of lesbian women and gay men are now becoming parents. There are only a few studies that have evaluated coparenting in same-sex couples. However, these addressed adoptive couples and not the lesbian and gay parent families through donor insemination or surrogacy, respectively. This study examined the psychometric properties of the Coparenting Scale-Revised and its relationship with dyadic adjustment, discipline management, and internalized sexual stigma in Italian same-sex-planned families. The factor structure showed a satisfactory internal consistency and criterion validity with correlates of coparenting behaviours. While Family Integrity factor was confirmed, Disparagement and Reprimand dimensions collapsed into Conflict factor. Non-genetic parents showed lower levels of conflict than genetic parents. Most importantly, coparenting emerged as a significant function not shaped by gender, but influenced by parental status and internalized sexual stigma.


Journal of Health Psychology | 2016

Coming out during adolescence: Perceived parents' reactions and internalized sexual stigma.

Roberto Baiocco; Lilybeth Fontanesi; Federica Santamaria; Salvatore Ioverno; Emma Baumgartner; Fiorenzo Laghi

Disclosing sexual orientation to parents is a challenging developmental task for lesbian and gay adolescents. The aim of the study is to investigate parental negative reaction to coming out, which is associated with high levels of internalized sexual stigma and psychological problems. Participants’ perceptions of their parents’ reactions, age at coming out, gender, parental political orientation and religiosity, family functioning, and internalized sexual stigma were assessed in 150 Italian homosexual adolescents. Findings confirm that negative parental reactions are connected to poor family functioning and strong beliefs in traditional values. Path analysis results identified that negative reaction to coming out mediates the effect between a more rigid family functioning and internalized sexual stigma. Implications for clinical and social fields are discussed.


Journal of Sex Research | 2018

Assessing Prejudice Toward Two-Father Parenting and Two-Mother Parenting: The Beliefs on Same-Sex Parenting Scale

Salvatore Ioverno; Nicola Carone; Vittorio Lingiardi; Nicola Nardelli; Paolo Pagone; Jessica Pistella; Marco Salvati; Alessandra Simonelli; Roberto Baiocco

This article describes two interrelated studies that investigated beliefs and stereotypes on two-father parenting and two-mother parenting through the development and validation of the Beliefs on Same-Sex Parenting (BOSSP) scale. The BOSSP captures two beliefs: (1) prejudices toward same-sex couples’ inherent inability to parent and (2) concerns about same-sex parenting that are not necessarily related to homonegativity. In Study 1 (301 heterosexual participants), exploratory factor analysis (EFA) suggested an 11-item scale for attitudes toward both two-father families and two-mother families, with two factors: parenting skills, which evaluates beliefs on same-sex couples’ ability to take care of their children; and parental adjustment, which assesses beliefs on the impact of challenges related to same-sex parenting on children’s well-being. Support for convergent validity between BOSSP factor scores and those of theoretically related measures were provided. In Study 2 (346 heterosexual participants surveyed in two time points), CFA indicated that the two-factor model provided the best fit. Test-retest reliability and longitudinal invariance were documented. Finally, results revealed that more negative attitudes toward same-sex parenting were held by men than by women and were associated with negative opinions on reproductive techniques. The innovative characteristics of the BOSSP and implications for future practice are discussed.


Infanzia e Adolescenza | 2013

Famiglie composte da genitori gay e lesbiche e famiglie composte da genitori eterosessuali: benessere dei bambini, impegno nella relazione e soddisfazione diadica

Roberto Baiocco; Federica Santamaria; Salvatore Ioverno; Chiara Petracca; Paola Biondi; Fiorenzo Laghi; Silvia Mazzoni

La letteratura sottolinea numerose somiglianze tra nuclei familiari composti da persone gay e lesbiche e da persone eterosessuali, rispetto al funzionamento familiare, le competenze genitoriali e un positivo adattamento psicologico dei bambini. Obiettivi: Il presente lavoro indaga l’atteggiamento nei confronti della genitorialita omosessuale in un gruppo di genitori gay (N=16) e lesbiche (N=16) confrontando tale gruppo con genitori eterosessuali (padri=16; madri=16) su variabili quali l’adattamento familiare, di coppia e le percezioni delle proprie competenze genitoriali. Metodo: Sono stati somministrati un’intervista semi-strutturata e questionari self-report per indagare le competenze genitoriali, la soddisfazione di coppia, la relazione con la famiglia d’origine e l’adattamento del bambino. Risultati: Le madri lesbiche riferiscono un’elevata soddisfazione di coppia ed una valutazione piu favorevole degli esiti di sviluppo dei bambini. I genitori gay e lesbiche, infine, mostrano un impegno di coppia piu elevato rispetto a quelli eterosessuali. Conclusioni: Complessivamente, a conferma di una vasta letteratura internazionale, maggiori sembrano essere le analogie rispetto alle differenze tra genitori omosessuali ed eterosessuali in relazione alla percezione del funzionamento diadico e familiare. Lo studio fornisce non solo dati di ricerca, ma anche spunti di riflessione per la promozione del benessere e per il sostegno alla genitorialita in persone gay e lesbiche.


Culture, Health & Sexuality | 2018

Attitudes towards same-sex parenting in Italy: the influence of traditional gender ideology

Salvatore Ioverno; Roberto Baiocco; Vittorio Lingiardi; Valeria Verrastro; Salvatore D’Amore; Robert-Jay Green

Abstract This study aimed to examine the role of gender ideology, religiosity and political conservatism on attitudes toward same-sex parenting in Italy at a time when same-sex parent families are undergoing attacks from ideological campaigns opposing non-traditional gender roles and families. We collected data from 4,187 heterosexual respondents about attitudes towards two-father and two-mother parenting, homonegativity, attitudes toward traditional masculinity and femininity, religious involvement and political conservatism. We conducted multiple group structural equation model analyses to test whether sex moderated any of the estimated associations among variables. Results showed that traditional beliefs about femininity were directly associated with negative attitudes towards two-mother and two-father parenting, while traditional beliefs about masculinity had a significant direct effect only on two-father parenting. Homonegativity partially mediated the association between religiosity, political conservatism and traditional beliefs about masculinity and femininity on negative attitudes toward both types of same-sex parenting. Gender differences were found for the indirect effects of political conservatism and religiosity on attitudes towards same-sex parenting. The theoretical contributions and implications of the findings are discussed.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2017

How HEXACO Personality Traits Predict Different Selfie-Posting Behaviors among Adolescents and Young Adults

Roberto Baiocco; Antonio Chirumbolo; Dora Bianchi; Salvatore Ioverno; Mara Morelli; Maria Rosaria Nappa

Selfies are self-portrait photos shared on Social Networks. Previous literature has investigated how personality traits, and specifically narcissism, are associated with selfie-posting behaviors. In this contribution we investigated how selfie-posting behaviors are predicted by the six HEXACO personality traits, controlling for age, gender and sexual orientation. The Kinsey scale, three questions about the frequency of own selfies, group selfies and selfies with partner, and 60-item HEXACO Personality Inventory-Revised were administered to 750 young people from 13 to 30 years. Females, adolescents and not-exclusively heterosexual people posted more own selfies, and adolescents posted also more group selfies and selfies with partner. Moreover, lower Honesty/Humility, lower Conscientiousness, higher Emotionality and higher Extraversion significantly predict own selfies and group selfies. Finally, only lower Honesty/Humility and higher Emotionality predict selfies with partner. Theoretical and practical implications are provided.

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Roberto Baiocco

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fiorenzo Laghi

Paris Descartes University

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Vittorio Lingiardi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Emma Baumgartner

Sapienza University of Rome

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Jessica Pistella

Sapienza University of Rome

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Lilybeth Fontanesi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marco Salvati

Sapienza University of Rome

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Nicola Carone

Sapienza University of Rome

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Nicola Nardelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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