Research on the sexual behavior of Afro-American women has been limited and has paid little attention to those aspects of the Afro-American culture and early socialization experiences which tend to inhibit or facilitate sexual expression. In this study, 240 Afro-American women, ranging in age from 18-50 years, reared in urban or rural settings, from a variety of experiential and economic backgrounds, will be interviewed on two occasions at two sites: at an office in an Afro-American community or at UCLA. A comparison group of 120 Anglo-American women will also be asked to respond to the same measures. Subjects will be volunteers who are referred to the Principal Investigator through Anglo and Afro-American physicians selected at random through rosters of the Los Angeles County and National Medical Associations. The study will identify the similarities and differences of socialization experiences within and between the ethnic groups which influence sexual knowledge, behavior, attitudes, sexual guilt and a measure of social desirability. The general hypothesis to be tested is that societal stereotypes regarding the sexual behavior of Afro-American women often conflict with cultural, parental and other values communicated in early childhood and adolescence, resulting in Afro-American women's awareness of this role conflict. Adult expression and the deferment or onset of sexual activity is influenced by the subjects' reported adherence to sexual behavioral expectations communicated by the sub-culture, from parents, the church, etc., or to those sexual behavioral expectations communicated through stereotypes perpetuated in the larger society.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01MH033603-03S2
Application #
3375432
Study Section
Mental Health Behavioral Sciences Research Review Committee (BSR)
Project Start
1981-01-01
Project End
1986-12-31
Budget Start
1985-09-28
Budget End
1986-12-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1985
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Type
Hospitals
DUNS #
119132785
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095
Wyatt, G E; Riederle, M (1994) Sexual harassment and prior sexual trauma among African-American and white American women. Violence Vict 9:233-47
Wyatt, G E; Guthrie, D; Notgrass, C M (1992) Differential effects of women's child sexual abuse and subsequent sexual revictimization. J Consult Clin Psychol 60:167-73
Wyatt, G E; Dunn, K M (1991) Examining predictors of sex guilt in multiethnic samples of women. Arch Sex Behav 20:471-85
Wyatt, G E (1991) Examining ethnicity versus race in AIDS related sex research. Soc Sci Med 33:37-45
Wyatt, G E; Newcomb, M (1990) Internal and external mediators of women's sexual abuse in childhood. J Consult Clin Psychol 58:758-67
Wyatt, G E (1989) Reexamining factors predicting Afro-American and white American women's age at first coitus. Arch Sex Behav 18:271-98
Wyatt, G E; Peters, S D; Guthrie, D (1988) Kinsey revisited, Part I: Comparisons of the sexual socialization and sexual behavior of white women over 33 years. Arch Sex Behav 17:201-39
Wyatt, G E (1988) The relationship between child sexual abuse and adolescent sexual functioning in Afro-American and white American women. Ann N Y Acad Sci 528:111-22
Wyatt, G E; Peters, S D; Guthrie, D (1988) Kinsey revisited, Part II: Comparisons of the sexual socialization and sexual behavior of black women over 33 years. Arch Sex Behav 17:289-332
Wyatt, G E; Peters, S D (1986) Issues in the definition of child sexual abuse in prevalence research. Child Abuse Negl 10:231-40

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