Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Music Videos Affect Teenaged Kids' Sexual Behaviour

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Mar, 2015 12:46 PM
    Parents may consider music videos a harmless pastime for their teenaged kids but they may negatively impact their sexual behaviour as they objectify women and promote sexual activities involving men, says a study.
     
    Researchers from the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium found that watching music videos definitely had an influence on how sexually active boys and girls thought peers of the same sex were.
     
    "It made them believe that many of their friends were also sexually active - even though this might, of course, not be true," said study co-author and PhD student Eline Frison in a paper that was published in Springer's journal Sex Roles.
     
    Over the course of one year, the researchers gathered information three times from 515 Belgian teenagers between ages 12 and 15.
     
    They were asked how much music television they watched, how sexually active they were and indeed also how sexually active they thought their peers were.
     
    The researchers found that watching sexual music videos only had an effect on the sexual behaviour of teenaged boys but not on girls.
     
    They believe such behaviour is influenced by the sexual scripts of music videos, which tend to show men taking the more active role in any sexual interaction.
     
    This, in turn, made the boys watch even more such television.
     
    On the other hand, girls seemingly did not want to be reminded too much about what their boyfriends might be up to, and they preferred to switch off these programmes.
     
    This might be a type of defence reaction on the part of girls who believe that many male peers are sexually active.
     
    "Regarding the influence of music television exposure on sexual behaviour, our findings suggest that increased sexual activities may be triggered by media use among boys, but not among girls," Frison added.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    How To Use Your Voice To Get The Dream Job

    How To Use Your Voice To Get The Dream Job
    Instead of resorting to a conventional written resume, sending your prospective employer a videotape recording of your professional credentials may increase your chances of getting hired, new research shows.

    How To Use Your Voice To Get The Dream Job

    Robots Programmed To Mimic Actions Of Child To Calm Little Patients In Alberta

    Robots Programmed To Mimic Actions Of Child To Calm Little Patients In Alberta
    CALGARY — It’s a robot designed to bring comfort to little patients at Alberta Children’s Hospital. Four robots are being used to calm children getting injections or other medical procedures by giving high fives, telling jokes and stories or playing music.

    Robots Programmed To Mimic Actions Of Child To Calm Little Patients In Alberta

    Unemployment Can Change Your Personality

    Unemployment Can Change Your Personality
    Unemployment could be a vicious cycle. It can change peoples' core personality -- making some less conscientious, agreeable and open -- which may make it difficult for them to find new jobs, says a study.

    Unemployment Can Change Your Personality

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose
    Have a good look at your partner's fingers during the ring ceremony as men with short index fingers and long ring fingers are nicer towards women, says a study.

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago
    Using data from over 150 languages, linguists from University of California, Berkeley have found that "Indo-European languages" originated 5,500-6,500 years ago on the Pontic-Caspian steppe stretching from Moldova, Ukraine to Russia and western Kazakhstan.

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk
    Female physicians are approximately one and a half times more likely to be divorced than male physicians of a similar age, says a study.

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk