Perfume
ads, beer billboards, movie posters: everywhere you look, women’s
sexualized bodies are on display. A new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that both men and women see images of sexy women’s bodies as objects, while they see sexy-looking men as people.
Sexual objectification has been well studied, but most of the
research is about looking at the effects of this objectification.
“What’s unclear is, we don’t actually know whether people at a basic
level recognize sexualized females or sexualized males as objects,”
says Philippe Bernard of Université libre de Bruxelles in Belgium.
Bernard cowrote the new paper with Sarah Gervais, Jill Allen, Sophie
Campomizzi, and Olivier Klein.
Psychological research has worked out that our brains see people and
objects in different ways. For example, while we’re good at recognizing
a whole face, just part of a face is a bit baffling. On the other hand,
recognizing part of a chair is just as easy as recognizing a whole
chair.
One way that psychologists have found to test whether something is
seen as an object is by turning it upside down. Pictures of people
present a recognition problem when they’re turned upside down, but
pictures of objects don’t have that problem. So Bernard and his
colleagues used a test where they presented pictures of men and women
in sexualized poses, wearing underwear. Each participant watched the
pictures appear one by one on a computer screen. Some of the pictures
were right side up and some were upside down. After each picture, there
was a second of black screen, then the participant was shown two
images. They were supposed to choose the one that matched the one they
had just seen.
People recognized right-side-up men better than upside-down men,
suggesting that they were seeing the sexualized men as people. But the
women in underwear weren’t any harder to recognize when they were
upside down—which is consistent with the idea that people see sexy
women as objects. There was no difference between male and female
participants.
We see sexualized women every day on billboards, buildings, and the
sides of buses and this study suggests that we think of these images as
if they were objects, not people. “What is motivating this study is to
understand to what extent people are perceiving these as human or not,”
Bernard says. The next step, he says, is to study how seeing all these
images influences how people treat real women.
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