2024
The Potential Role of Undetectable = Untransmittable (U = U) in Reducing HIV Stigma among Sexual Minority Men in the US
Calabrese S, Kalwicz D, Zaheer M, Dovidio J, Garner A, Zea M, Treloar C, Holt M, Smith A, MacGibbon J, Modrakovic D, Rao S, Eaton L. The Potential Role of Undetectable = Untransmittable (U = U) in Reducing HIV Stigma among Sexual Minority Men in the US. AIDS And Behavior 2024, 28: 741-757. PMID: 38285293, PMCID: PMC11043859, DOI: 10.1007/s10461-023-04263-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsReduce HIV stigmaHIV stigmaDestigmatizing potentialNon-Hispanic whitesHIV transmission riskCross-sectional studyPercentage of participantsStigma dimensionsStigmatizing beliefsSexual minority menHIV discriminationStigmaUndetectable viral loadMinority menHIVParticipantsEngage peoplePositive feelingsTransmission riskMenPeopleInformation messagesScientific underpinningsViral loadIntervention
2023
Targeted social marketing of PrEP and the stigmatization of black sexual minority men
Calabrese S, Kalwicz D, Dovidio J, Rao S, Modrakovic D, Boone C, Magnus M, Kharfen M, Patel V, Zea M. Targeted social marketing of PrEP and the stigmatization of black sexual minority men. PLOS ONE 2023, 18: e0285329. PMID: 37167318, PMCID: PMC10174512, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0285329.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBlack sexual minority menSexual minority menFocus group participantsPrEP stigmaGroup participantsSubject comparisonsMinority menLongitudinal online surveyHIV incidenceGroup comparisonsPrEPMore stigmatizingParticipantsMenFocus groupsMinimal effectStigmaGroupTargeted Social MarketingOnline surveyHIVInteraction effectsSocial marketingSocial marketing initiatives‘There are people like me who will see that, and it will just wash over them’: Black sexual minority men’s perspectives on messaging in PrEP visual advertisements
Kalwicz D, Rao S, Modrakovic D, Zea M, Dovidio J, Magnus M, Kharfen M, Patel V, Calabrese S. ‘There are people like me who will see that, and it will just wash over them’: Black sexual minority men’s perspectives on messaging in PrEP visual advertisements. Culture Health & Sexuality 2023, 25: 1371-1386. PMID: 36598172, PMCID: PMC10318116, DOI: 10.1080/13691058.2022.2157491.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBlack sexual minority menPublic health campaignsSexual minority menPrEP useHealth campaignsMinority menPre-exposure prophylaxisPrEP awarenessPublic health crisisPrEP informationHigh incidencePrEPMenHIVHealth crisisCondomsFocus groupsPromotional messagingMen's perspectivesPrimary themesAcceptabilityProphylaxisIncidence
2022
“Master” of None: Institutional Language Change Linked to Reduced Gender Bias
Bailey A, Dovidio J, LaFrance M. “Master” of None: Institutional Language Change Linked to Reduced Gender Bias. Journal Of Experimental Psychology Applied 2022, 28: 237-248. PMID: 34014722, DOI: 10.1037/xap0000326.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLanguage policy changeGeneric languageLanguage policesIncidence of menLanguage changeFace recognition taskActual menMale exemplarsLanguageGender biasGender inequityRecognition taskMore exemplarsLeadership rolesYale UniversityApplied contextExemplarsGeneric termMemoryPrevious experimental researchMindStudentsRange of processesReal-world policiesMen
2020
Implicit androcentrism: Men are human, women are gendered
Bailey A, LaFrance M, Dovidio J. Implicit androcentrism: Men are human, women are gendered. Journal Of Experimental Social Psychology 2020, 89: 103980. DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2020.103980.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchImplicit Association TestGender differencesCertain social rolesCognitive processesExamples of humanityTheoretical accountsAssociation TestHuman conceptsAndrocentric tendencySocial rolesMale participantsParticipantsSemantic redundancySensitive topicsGender biasPeopleSame redundancyMale respondentsAndrocentrismPresent studyWomenMenPersonsLabelsBias
1992
The Look of Power: Gender Differences and Similarities in Visual Dominance Behavior
Ellyson S, Dovidio J, Brown C. The Look of Power: Gender Differences and Similarities in Visual Dominance Behavior. 1992, 50-80. DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4757-2199-7_3.Peer-Reviewed Original Research