Top Stories - Posted by Susan Hagen-Rochester on Monday, April 9, 2012 10:17 - 4 Comments
Some anti-gay bias may be self-directed

"This study shows that if you are feeling that kind of visceral reaction to an out-group, ask yourself, ‘Why?’" says co-author Richard Ryan. "Those intense emotions should serve as a call to self-reflection." (Credit: man with rainbow t-shirt via Shutterstock)
U. ROCHESTER (US) — Homophobia is more pronounced in people with unacknowledged attraction to the same sex, according to a new study.
In addition, the series of psychology studies demonstrates that people who grew up with authoritarian parents who forbade such desires may be more prone to homophobia.
The study is the first to document the role that both parenting and sexual orientation play in the formation of intense and visceral fear of homosexuals, including self-reported homophobic attitudes, discriminatory bias, implicit hostility towards gays, and endorsement of anti-gay policies.
Conducted by a team from the University of Rochester, the University of Essex, England, and the University of California, Santa Barbara, the research will be published the April issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
“Individuals who identify as straight but in psychological tests show a strong attraction to the same sex may be threatened by gays and lesbians because homosexuals remind them of similar tendencies within themselves,” explains Netta Weinstein, a lecturer at the University of Essex and the study’s lead author.
“In many cases these are people who are at war with themselves and they are turning this internal conflict outward,” adds co-author Richard Ryan, professor of psychology at the University of Rochester who helped direct the research.
The paper includes four separate experiments, conducted in the United States and Germany, with each study involving an average of 160 college students.
The findings provide new empirical evidence to support the psychoanalytic theory that the fear, anxiety, and aversion that some seemingly heterosexual people hold toward gays and lesbians can grow out of their own repressed same-sex desires, Ryan says.
The results also support the more modern self-determination theory, developed by Ryan and Edward Deci at the University of Rochester, which links controlling parenting to poorer self-acceptance and difficulty valuing oneself unconditionally.
In the media
The findings may help to explain the personal dynamics behind some bullying and hate crimes directed at gays and lesbians, the authors argue. Media coverage of gay-related hate crimes suggests that attackers often perceive some level of threat from homosexuals. People in denial about their sexual orientation may lash out because gay targets threaten and bring this internal conflict to the forefront, the authors write.
The research also sheds light on high profile cases in which anti-gay public figures are caught engaging in same-sex sexual acts. The authors cite such examples as Ted Haggard, the evangelical preacher who opposed gay marriage but was exposed in a gay sex scandal in 2006, and Glenn Murphy, Jr., former chairman of the Young Republican National Federation and vocal opponent of gay marriage, who was accused of sexually assaulting a 22-year-old man in 2007, as potentially reflecting this dynamic.
“We laugh at or make fun of such blatant hypocrisy, but in a real way, these people may often themselves be victims of repression and experience exaggerated feelings of threat,” says Ryan. “Homophobia is not a laughing matter. It can sometimes have tragic consequences,” Ryan says, pointing to cases such as the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard or the 2011 shooting of Larry King.
Quick associations
To explore participants’ explicit and implicit sexual attraction, the researchers measured the discrepancies between what people say about their sexual orientation and how they react during a split-second timed task.
Students were shown words and pictures on a computer screen and asked to put these in “gay” or “straight” categories. Before each of the 50 trials, participants were subliminally primed with either the word “me” or “others” flashed on the screen for 35 milliseconds. They were then shown the words “gay,” “straight,” “homosexual,” and “heterosexual” as well as pictures of straight and gay couples, and the computer tracked precisely their response times. A faster association of “me” with “gay” and a slower association of “me” with “straight” indicated an implicit gay orientation.
A second experiment, in which subjects were free to browse same-sex or opposite-sex photos, provided an additional measure of implicit sexual attraction.
Through a series of questionnaires, participants also reported on the type of parenting they experienced growing up, from authoritarian to democratic. Students were asked to agree or disagree with statements like: “I felt controlled and pressured in certain ways,” and “I felt free to be who I am.” For gauging the level of homophobia in a household, subjects responded to items like: “It would be upsetting for my mom to find out she was alone with a lesbian” or “My dad avoids gay men whenever possible.”
Finally, the researcher measured participants’ level of homophobia—both overt, as expressed in questionnaires on social policy and beliefs, and implicit, as revealed in word-completion tasks. In the latter, students wrote down the first three words that came to mind, for example for the prompt “k i _ _”. The study tracked the increase in the amount of aggressive words elicited after subliminally priming subjects with the word “gay” for 35 milliseconds.
‘Know thyself’
Across all the studies, participants with supportive and accepting parents were more in touch with their implicit sexual orientation, while participants from authoritarian homes revealed the most discrepancy between explicit and implicit attraction.
“In a predominately heterosexual society, ‘know thyself’ can be a challenge for many gay individuals. But in controlling and homophobic homes, embracing a minority sexual orientation can be terrifying,” explains Weinstein. These individuals risk losing the love and approval of their parents if they admit to same sex attractions, so many people deny or repress that part of themselves, she said.
In addition, participants who reported themselves to be more heterosexual than their performance on the reaction time task indicated were most likely to react with hostility to gay others, the studies shows. That incongruence between implicit and explicit measures of sexual orientation predicted a variety of homophobic behaviors, including self-reported anti-gay attitudes, implicit hostility towards gays, endorsement of anti-gay policies, and discriminatory bias such as the assignment of harsher punishments for homosexuals, the authors conclude.
“This study shows that if you are feeling that kind of visceral reaction to an out-group, ask yourself, ‘Why?’” says Ryan. “Those intense emotions should serve as a call to self-reflection.”
The study had several limitations, the authors write. All participants were college students, so it may be helpful in future research to test these effects in younger adolescents still living at home and in older adults who have had more time to establish lives independent of their parents and to look at attitudes as they change over time.
Other contributors to the paper include Cody DeHaan, Andrew Przybylski, and Nicole Legate, all from the University of Rochester, and William Ryan, from the University of California in Santa Barbara.
More news from the University of Rochester: www.rochester.edu/news
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4 Comments
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Karen Rainwater
While there may be some truth to the claim in this article for some people, it is by no means accurate across the board. There are genuinely and honestly held beliefs that are simply inconsistent with accepting homosexuality as healthy and good. Many Christ followers recognize the truth of scripture and when forced to choose between one claim of truth and the other, make their choice. I have no hidden desires that are reacting viscerally to homosexuality. I simply take God as His word that homosexuality is morally unacceptable. I am able to love people that sin, while refusing to pretend the sin is not a sin. The group of people that include myself are quite often ignored and most certainly disrespected in this new world order of “homosexuality is wonderful”. Until Christ followers are recognized and respected for their beliefs, the world will continue to search around scratching it’s head looking for “answers” to the rejection of homosexuality. There are many, many reasons for the rejection. I suspect that the bottom line is that every heart actually knows the truth about homosexuality, written there by God. But, for various reasons, some of those hearts will keep pretending to see the “emperor’s new clothes”.
James
The single most dangerous component of some belief systems is that they instill (often explicitly) a perspective of exclusionism. In order to believe you must not believe anything else. This perspective discourages rational decision making which would usually include weighing sources of information and potential validity when presented with new information or that which conflicts with ideas already held in memory. Mathis study shows one of the dangers of such perspectives.
In reference specifically for your post Karen, though I realize you will likely never revisit this page nor will I, you make several assertions which are either blatantly incorrect or ill informed. With an estimated 2 billon followers Christianity (making it the largest religion by number of followers) is the most widely accepted belief system. To say that Christ’s followers are not recognized is absurd. Respected is a more subjective matter and varies even within Christianity itself. The Bible makes a virtually incalcuable number of suggestions about how to live your life (even setting aside the Old Testament). If you truly were to accept this as the word of god and live by its every word you would not be able to function in society.
Karen Rainwater
James, you said, “The single most dangerous component of some belief systems is that they instill (often explicitly) a perspective of exclusionism. In order to believe you must not believe anything else. This perspective discourages rational decision making which would usually include weighing sources of information and potential validity when presented with new information or that which conflicts with ideas already held in memory. Mathis study shows one of the dangers of such perspectives.”
Or, I have examined many, many sources of information and am satisfied with the accuracy of scripture. I have found nothing of substance that stands against the truth of scripture. Is it dangerous to believe firmly that water is wet? Of course not, because we each have personal experience with the wetness of water. I can’t simply discount what I know to be true simply because there are differing claims. It is a tired and old attempt, to suggest that one is naive or lacks intelligent for believing scripture. I might even go so far as to say desperate. The danger is more to be found with swaying with every “truth” that comes along.
And, you said, “With an estimated 2 billon followers Christianity (making it the largest religion by number of followers) is the most widely accepted belief system. To say that Christ’s followers are not recognized is absurd. Respected is a more subjective matter and varies even within Christianity itself. The Bible makes a virtually incalcuable number of suggestions about how to live your life (even setting aside the Old Testament). If you truly were to accept this as the word of god and live by its every word you would not be able to function in society.”
When I say ignored, I am speaking specifically to the issue of why an individual may reject homosexuality as natural and healthy. It is a perfectly healthy and appropriate response when one recognizes scripture as truth. There is no pathology with that. To ignore the Christian that believes scripture is quite intolerant. And, these articles that claim to suggest “reasons” and “explanations” for rejecting homosexuality is to over complicate the issue.
Your suggestion that living faithfully by the Bible hampers functioning in society is pretty weak, on the one hand, and dead on, on the other. It is difficult to live up to Christ’s perfection. Actually, impossible. But, through Christ, we gain the strength to do so, and the peace to live with our imperfections. Of course trying to live by God’s will in this society is difficult. The world definitely sets up many traps and attacks to those living to obey God. But, those difficulties are nothing compared to the reward of obedience to and love from God.
It is too bad that you will likely not see this. I have enjoyed responding. I am always delighted to look at my faith and share why it is the one and only source of peace and joy in my life.
























I the Quick Association word completion task I wonder if they have taken into consideration Scrabble base point optimization influencing word choice? Some people, regardless of sexual orientation, might choose ‘kick’ over ‘kind’ every time.