
%0 Journal Article
%T The Effects of the Sexualization of Female Video Game Characters on Gender Stereotyping and Female Self-Concept
%J Sex roles
%D 2009
%A Behm-Morawitz, Elizabeth
%A Mastro, Dana
%V 61
%N 11-12
%P 808-823
%X The present study utilized an experimental design to investigate the short term effects of exposure to sexualized female video game characters on gender stereotyping and female self-concept in emerging adults. Bussey and Bandura’s (1999) social cognitive theory of gender development and differentiation was used to explicate this relationship. Undergraduate students (N = 328) at a large U.S. Southwestern university participated in the study. Students were randomly assigned to play a “sexualized” heroine, a “non-sexualized” heroine, or no video game; then completed an online questionnaire. Female self-efficacy was negatively affected by game play with the sexualized female character. Results cautiously suggest that playing a sexualized video game heroine unfavorably influenced people’s beliefs about women in the real world.<p />
%G en
%I Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group
%@ 0360-0025
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11199-009-9683-8