Hace 10 años | Por oxferyr a guiasamarillaspress.es
Publicado hace 10 años por oxferyr a guiasamarillaspress.es

Un estudio de la Universidad de Stanford concluye que las mujeres que utilizan personajes de apariencia más sexualizada tienden a sentirse como objetos y a aceptar ideas falsas sobre el sexo en la vida real.

Comentarios

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Si es que hay estudios para todo...

edmond_dantes

http://news.stanford.edu/pr/2013/pr-virtual-female-avatars-100913.html

Participants donned helmets that blocked out the real world, immersing them in a virtual world of 3-D sight and sound. [...]

Once in the new world, each participant looked in a virtual mirror and saw herself or another woman, dressed provocatively or conservatively. The avatar's movements in the mirror perfectly copied the participant's actual physical movements, allowing her to truly feel as if she occupied that body.

The researchers then introduced a male accomplice into the virtual world to talk to the participant. What seemed like a normal, get-to-know-you conversation was actually an assessment of how much the women viewed themselves as objects. Women "wearing" the sexualized avatars bearing their likenesses talked about their bodies, hair and dress more than women in the other avatars, suggesting that they were thinking of themselves more as objects than as people.


Hay TANTAS cosas discutibles en este experimento, empezando por si una minifalda es ropa "sexualizada" o simplemente un item normal de vestuario

edmond_dantes

...Porque normalmente, cuando alguien habla de avatares sexualizados, habla de cosas como el diseño de personajes femeninos en Guilty Crown o la sniper del último Metal Gear que va básicamente en bikini por el campo de batalla. No una puta minifalda y un tube top.