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Published in: AIDS and Behavior 3/2007

01-05-2007 | Original Paper

Evaluating the Risk and Attractiveness of Romantic Partners When Confronted with Contradictory Cues

Authors: Michael Hennessy, Martin Fishbein, Brenda Curtis, Daniel W. Barrett

Published in: AIDS and Behavior | Issue 3/2007

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Abstract

Research shows that people engage in “risky” sex with “safe” partners and in “safer” sex with “riskier” partners. How is the determination of “risky” or “safe” status made? Factorial survey methodology was used to randomly construct descriptions of romantic partners based on attractive and/or risky characteristics. Respondents evaluated 20 descriptions for attractiveness, health risk, likelihood of going on a date, likelihood of unprotected sex, and likelihood of STD/HIV infection. Respondents were most attracted to and perceived the least risk from attractive descriptions and were least attracted to and perceived the most risk from the risky descriptions. The differences between the “conflicting information” descriptions are attributable to a primacy effect: descriptions that began with attractiveness information but end with risk information were evaluated more positively than those that began with risk and ended with attractive information.
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Metadata
Title
Evaluating the Risk and Attractiveness of Romantic Partners When Confronted with Contradictory Cues
Authors
Michael Hennessy
Martin Fishbein
Brenda Curtis
Daniel W. Barrett
Publication date
01-05-2007
Published in
AIDS and Behavior / Issue 3/2007
Print ISSN: 1090-7165
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3254
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-006-9156-9

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