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Dive into the research topics where William D. McIntosh is active.

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Featured researches published by William D. McIntosh.


Leisure Sciences | 2004

Collectors and Collecting: A Social Psychological Perspective

William D. McIntosh; Brandon J. Schmeichel

Collecting is a pervasive behavior in our culture, yet it has received little attention in the psychological literature. We examine eight aspects of the collecting process, drawing on existing ideas and research in social psychology as well as existing research on collectors and collecting to describe the motivations that underlie collecting behavior. We suggest that collectors are drawn to collecting as a means of bolstering the self by setting up goals that are tangible and attainable and provide the collector with concrete feedback of progress.


Sex Roles | 1997

The Aging Woman in Popular Film: Underrepresented, Unattractive, Unfriendly, and Unintelligent

Doris G. Bazzini; William D. McIntosh; Stephen M. Smith; Sabrina Cook; Caleigh Harris

The present study examined 100 top-grossing motion pictures spanning from the 1940s through the 1980s (20 movies from each decade). Eight hundred and twenty-nine characters were rated on attractiveness, character goodness, intelligence, friendliness, socioeconomic status, romantic activity, and movie outcome. It was hypothesized that ageist and sexist stereotypes would interact such that (a) older female characters would be more underrepresented, and (b) more negatively portrayed, than their male contemporaries. Both hypotheses were supported. Implications regarding double standards for age, and the media’s propagation of beauty-related standards for females were discussed.


Addictive Behaviors | 1998

Who smokes in hollywood? characteristics of smokers in popular films from 1940 to 1989

William D. McIntosh; Doris G. Bazzini; Stephen M. Smith; Shanan M Wayne

We examined how smokers were depicted in 100 popular films spanning 5 decades. Smokers were depicted as more romantically and sexually active than nonsmokers and as marginally more intelligent than nonsmokers. Smokers and nonsmokers did not differ in terms of attractiveness, goodness, socioeconomic status, aggression, friendliness, or outcome at films end. Thus, if anything, smokers are depicted a bit more positively than nonsmokers. We compared Hollywoods depiction of smokers to real-world demographics on smoking and found that Hollywoods depiction of smoking tends to ignore the negative consequences and correlates (e.g., ill health, low socioeconomic status, aggressive behavior) of smoking.


International Journal of Aging & Human Development | 2011

What Do Older Adults Seek in Their Potential Romantic Partners? Evidence from Online Personal Ads

William D. McIntosh; Lawrence Locker; Katherine Briley; Rebecca G. Ryan; Alison Scott

Because of the dearth of available partners, older women looking to date may have to relax their dating standards to find a dating partner, perhaps accepting a life situation that is not what they had hoped for. However older women may be reluctant to sacrifice an often recently-gained lifestyle free of caregiving obligations. Older men, on the other hand, have a large pool of potential dating partners and do not face the same dilemma. We compared Internet dating profiles for 100 older adults and 100 younger adults, and found that older adults (and especially older women) were more selective than younger adults when it came to the age, race, religion, income, and height of a prospective dating partner. However, older adults were willing to travel substantially farther than younger adults to meet the right partner. These findings paint a clear picture of older Internet daters as eager to meet the right person, but not desperate to meet just anyone.


Mass Communication and Society | 2003

What's So Funny About a Poke in the Eye? The Prevalence of Violence in Comedy Films and Its Relation to Social and Economic Threat in the United States, 1951-2000

William D. McIntosh; John D. Murray; Rebecca M. Murray; Sunita Manian

We examined the violent content of the top-grossing comedy films from 1951 to 2000. Comedic violence increased sharply around 1970 and has been relatively consistent since then. Aggressors were depicted in somewhat more positive terms than targets, but in general, the message of comedic violence was not one of good triumphing over evil. Top-grossing comedy films featured more violence when unemployment, suicide, homicide, divorce, and the consumer price index were higher.


The Journal of Psychology | 2001

Goal orientations and the search for confirmatory affect.

William D. McIntosh; Leonard L. Martin; Jennings B. Jones

Abstract People differ with respect to their beliefs about the consequences of attaining goals. Some people (linkers) believe that attaining certain goals will make them happy, whereas others (nonlinkers) see their happiness as more contingent upon the inherent quality of their actions than upon the outcomes of those actions. Because of the importance linkers place on goal attainment, linkers should be likely to seek information indicative of their progress toward their goals. Because of the importance nonlinkers place on enjoyment, nonlinkers should be likely to seek information indicative of the pleasurableness of their current task. Because negative affect can signal a lack of goal progress, whereas positive affect can signal task enjoyment, linkers may place more weight on their negative than their positive affect, whereas nonlinkers may do the opposite. Consistent with these hypotheses, the results of this study showed that linkers reported more negative affect when exposed to sad videos than when exposed to happy videos but did not report different amounts of positive affect. Nonlinkers, on the other hand, reported more positive affect when exposed to happy videos than when exposed to sad videos but did not report different amounts of negative affect. The implications of this pattern for a number of theoretical perspectives on goals and affect are discussed.


Current Psychology | 1996

Recipient need and efficacious caring as moderators of helpers’ reactions to rejection and acceptance

Sidney Rosen; Susan E. Mickler; Wai Hing Cheuk; William D. McIntosh; Thomas F. Harlow; Patrick Rawa; Winona Cochran

Two experiments support and extend the thesis that rejection of their help is stressful for would-be helpers, and that it leads to “damage controlling” reactions whose eventual goal is to restore their self-image of being efficacious at helping and caring. American college students were invited to offer help, if they wished, to a poorly performing (confederate) recipient who then either rejected or accepted it. Rejected helpers expressed relatively negative affect, biased postdictions of low acceptance, claims of low decision control, recipient- and self-devaluation, and less desire for further association. Individual differences in self-perceived “efficacious caring” and manipulated level of recipient need were shown to moderate some of these outcome reactions. Violated expectancy of acceptance was shown to mediate some of these reactions. Studies were cited showing the generalizability of these findings and theoretical framework to applied contexts and across cultural settings.


Mass Communication and Society | 2006

Sexual Humor in Hollywood Films: Influences of Social and Economic Threat on the Desirability of Male and Female Characters

William D. McIntosh; John D. Murray; Rebecca M. Murray; Sunita Manian

After rating male and female characters in the top-grossing comedy films for each year (1951-2000), the authors predicted that during times of greater social and economic threat female film characters who joke about sex would be less physically attractive, and male characters would be lower in socioeconomic status. These qualities have been found in prior research to denote desirability in potential mates. Results were generally consistent with predictions. It was suggested that these results, paired with findings from previous studies, could be taken as support for a lowered expectations hypothesis: during bad times people feel less optimistic, and consequently even peoples fantasy partners are less grandiose.


Communication Reports | 2003

Are the Liberal Good in Hollywood? Characteristics of Political Figures in Popular Films from 1945 to 1998

William D. McIntosh; Rebecca M. Murray; John D. Murray; Debra Sabia

Previous research (Prindle & Endersby, 1993) indicated that the leaders of Hollywood are far more liberal than the average American. The question that remained to be answered was to what extent this liberal bias leaks into the Hollywood product. In an effort to answer this question we examined 124 political characters in 47 popular political films spanning five decades. The findings suggested that the charaaers who were depicted as more liberal also tended to be depicted as more intelligent, friendly, and good. However the results also suggest that the liberal bias in Hollywood is not very robust. Hollywood movers and shakers appeared to have kept their liberal bias in check to some extent. It is speculated, (similarly to Prindle & Endersby), that Hollywood was more invested in producing entertainment that is politically generic and palatable to a general audience than in making movies that promote their liberal political leanings.


Mental Health, Religion & Culture | 2008

The relationship between mindfulness and self-promoting illusions

Rusty A. Boatright; William D. McIntosh

It was hypothesized that people who are mindful will exhibit less self-enhancing illusions than those who are less mindful, based on the nature of mindfulness and Zen Buddhist philosophy. Self-enhancing illusions were measured using the Self Attributes Questionnaire, and mindfulness was measured using the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale among a sample of 151 students. Contrary to predictions, results revealed a positive correlation between mindfulness and self-enhancing illusions. Possible reasons for this seeming contradiction are discussed.

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Doris G. Bazzini

Appalachian State University

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John D. Murray

Georgia Southern University

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Lawrence Locker

Georgia Southern University

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Rebecca M. Murray

Georgia Southern University

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Thomas F. Harlow

State University of New York at Potsdam

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Amy A. Hackney

Georgia Southern University

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