Yanshu Huang
University of Auckland
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yanshu Huang.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Nicole Satherley; Petar Milojev; Lara M. Greaves; Yanshu Huang; Danny Osborne; Joseph Bulbulia; Chris G. Sibley
This study examines attrition rates over the first four years of the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study, a longitudinal national panel sample of New Zealand adults. We report the base rate and covariates for the following four distinct classes of respondents: explicit withdrawals, lost respondents, intermittent respondents and constant respondents. A multinomial logistic regression examined an extensive range of demographic and socio-psychological covariates (among them the Big-Six personality traits) associated with membership in these classes (N = 5,814). Results indicated that men, Māori and Asian peoples were less likely to be constant respondents. Conscientiousness and Honesty-Humility were also positively associated with membership in the constant respondent class. Notably, the effect sizes for the socio-psychological covariates of panel attrition tended to match or exceed those of standard demographic covariates. This investigation broadens the focus of research on panel attrition beyond demographics by including a comprehensive set of socio-psychological covariates. Our findings show that core psychological covariates convey important information about panel attrition, and are practically important to the management of longitudinal panel samples like the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2016
Yanshu Huang; Paul G. Davies; Chris G. Sibley; Danny Osborne
Although Benevolent Sexism (BS)—an ideology that highly reveres women who conform to traditional gender roles—is cloaked in a superficially positive tone, being placed upon a pedestal is inherently restrictive. Accordingly, because the paternalistic beliefs associated with BS are based on the idealization of traditional gender roles (which include motherhood), BS should predict people’s attitudes toward women’s reproductive rights. Using data from a nationwide longitudinal panel study (N = 12,299), Study 1 showed that BS (but not Hostile Sexism) had cross-lagged effects on opposition to both elective and traumatic abortion. Study 2 (N = 309) extended these findings by showing that the relationship between BS and support for abortion was fully mediated by attitudes toward motherhood. These results highlight the pernicious nature of BS by demonstrating that the idealization of women—and motherhood, in particular—comes at a substantial cost (namely, the restriction of women’s reproductive rights).
PLOS ONE | 2015
Lara M. Greaves; Petar Milojev; Yanshu Huang; Samantha Stronge; Danny Osborne; Joseph Bulbulia; Mike Grimshaw; Chris G. Sibley
We examined changes in psychological distress experienced by residents of Christchurch following two catastrophic earthquakes in late 2010 and early 2011, using data from the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study (NZAVS), a national probability panel study of New Zealand adults. Analyses focused on the 267 participants (172 women, 95 men) who were living in central Christchurch in 2009 (i.e., before the Christchurch earthquakes), and who also provided complete responses to our yearly panel questionnaire conducted in late 2010 (largely between the two major earthquakes), late 2011, and late 2012. Levels of psychological distress were similar across the different regions of central Christchurch immediately following the September 2010 earthquake, and remained comparable across regions in 2011. By late 2012, however, average levels of psychological distress in the regions had diverged as a function of the amount of property damage experienced within each given region. Specifically, participants in the least damaged region (i.e., the Fendalton-Waimairi and Riccarton-Wigram wards) experienced greater drops in psychological distress than did those in the moderately damaged region (i.e., across the Spreydon-Heathcote and Hagley-Ferrymead wards). However, the level of psychological distress reported by participants in the most damaged region (i.e., across Shirley-Papanui and Burwood-Pegasus) were not significantly different to those in the least damaged region of central Christchurch. These findings suggest that different patterns of psychological recovery emerged across the different regions of Christchurch, with the moderately damaged region faring the worst, but only after the initial shock of the destruction had passed.
Social Psychological and Personality Science | 2017
Matthew D. Hammond; Petar Milojev; Yanshu Huang; Chris G. Sibley
Ambivalent sexism theory states that prejudice toward women comprises two interrelated ideologies. Endorsement of hostile sexism—aggressive and competitive attitudes toward women—is linked with endorsement of benevolent sexism—paternalistic and patronizing attitudes toward women. We conduct the first systematic tests of how endorsement of sexism differs across age and across time, using six waves of a nationally representative panel sample of New Zealand adults (N = 10,398). Results indicated U-shaped trajectories for men’s endorsement of hostile sexism, women’s hostile sexism, and women’s benevolent sexism across the life span. However, over time, endorsement of these sexist attitudes tended to decrease for most ages. In contrast, men’s benevolent sexism followed a positive linear trajectory across age and tended not to change over time. These results provide novel evidence of how ambivalent sexism differs across age and highlight that benevolent sexism is particularly tenacious.
Social Psychological and Personality Science | 2018
Yanshu Huang; Danny Osborne; Chris G. Sibley
Sexist ideologies maintain and reinforce gender inequality, yet the stability of these belief systems is unknown. We addressed this oversight by examining changes in men’s and women’s hostile sexism (HS) and benevolent sexism (BS)—complementary gender-based belief systems, respectively, rooted in punitive and protective (albeit restrictive) attitudes toward women—using seven annual waves of longitudinal panel data (N = 15,626). Autoregressive cross-lagged models examined the rank-order stability of BS and HS, whereas latent growth models examined mean-level changes in both ideologies for men and women from 2009 to 2016. Results indicated that both BS and HS demonstrated high levels of rank-order stability across time for men and women. Nevertheless, women and men experienced mean-level curvilinear decreases in HS characterized by initial sharp declines that decelerated over time. Conversely, women’s mean-level BS initially declined slowly before gradually accelerating, whereas men’s mean-level HS decreased linearly. Together, these results indicate that sexism decreased over time.
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2017
Lara M. Greaves; Fiona Kate Barlow; Carol Lee; Correna M. Matika; Weiyu Wang; Cinnamon-Jo Lindsay; Claudia J. B. Case; Nikhil K. Sengupta; Yanshu Huang; Lucy J. Cowie; Samantha Stronge; Mary Storey; Lucy De Souza; Sam Manuela; Matthew D. Hammond; Petar Milojev; Carly S. Townrow; Emerald Muriwai; Nicole Satherley; Gloria Fraser; Tim West-Newman; Carla Houkamau; Joseph Bulbulia; Danny Osborne; Marc Stewart Wilson; Chris G. Sibley
Sex Roles | 2014
Yanshu Huang; Danny Osborne; Chris G. Sibley; Paul G. Davies
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2017
Lara M. Greaves; Fiona Kate Barlow; Yanshu Huang; Samantha Stronge; Gloria Fraser; Chris G. Sibley
Political Science | 2016
Chris G. Sibley; Andrew Robertson; Danny Osborne; Yanshu Huang; Petar Milojev; Lara M. Greaves; Carla A. Houkamau; Joseph Bulbulia; Fiona Kate Barlow
Sex Roles | 2017
Lara M. Greaves; Fiona Kate Barlow; Yanshu Huang; Samantha Stronge; Chris G. Sibley