
@article{ref1,
title="The effect of intergender conflict on sex-role attitudes",
journal="Sex roles",
year="1983",
author="Dworkin, Rosalind J. and Dworkin, Anthony Gary",
volume="9",
number="1",
pages="49-57",
abstract="This study explored conditions under which initially multidimensional attitudes change and coalesce into unidimensionality. One hundred twenty-one college students participated in a pretest-posttest control group experimental design involving a prejudice reduction simulation. One group was exposed to overt statements and action that supported traditional male dominance. This group exhibited significantly more modern sex-role attitudes than did the other groups; and the former's attitudes shifted to unidimensionality while the others' attitudes did not. The data also suggest independence between techniques that produce racial/liberalism and sexrole attitude modernity.<p />",
language="en",
issn="0360-0025",
doi="10.1007/BF00303109",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00303109"
}