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Understanding Adolescents’ Exposure to and Involvement with Sexually Oriented Television Contents

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Abstract:

Different explanations for why adolescents expose themselves to sexually oriented television programs were tested. We used data of a longitudinal study in which 2 panels - the first starting at age 12, the second starting at age 15 - were followed in 3 consecutive years to explore the associations between amounts of television viewing, viewer involvement, viewing motives, sexual maturation, and channel loyalty, on the one hand, and exposure to sexually oriented television viewing, on the other. Linear mixed effects analyses indicate that only the structural determinants of television viewing (viewing amounts and channel loyalty) are significant predictors of sexually oriented viewing. The consequences of these results for future research on sexual television effects are discussed.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

sexual (250), view (101), adolesc (93), orient (86), program (84), exposur (66), studi (66), televis (63), content (52), effect (50), viewer (48), time (44), involv (44), may (40), watch (38), use (36), j (35), motiv (33), sex (32), m (32), learn (31),

Author's Keywords:

Sexual socialization, television viewing, adolescence, uses and gratifications theory
Convention
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Name: International Communication Association
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MLA Citation:

Eggermont, Steven. "Understanding Adolescents’ Exposure to and Involvement with Sexually Oriented Television Contents" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA, May 23, 2007 <Not Available>. 2008-11-26 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p170094_index.html>

APA Citation:

Eggermont, S. , 2007-05-23 "Understanding Adolescents’ Exposure to and Involvement with Sexually Oriented Television Contents" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA Online <PDF>. 2008-11-26 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p170094_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: Different explanations for why adolescents expose themselves to sexually oriented television programs were tested. We used data of a longitudinal study in which 2 panels - the first starting at age 12, the second starting at age 15 - were followed in 3 consecutive years to explore the associations between amounts of television viewing, viewer involvement, viewing motives, sexual maturation, and channel loyalty, on the one hand, and exposure to sexually oriented television viewing, on the other. Linear mixed effects analyses indicate that only the structural determinants of television viewing (viewing amounts and channel loyalty) are significant predictors of sexually oriented viewing. The consequences of these results for future research on sexual television effects are discussed.

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Document Type: PDF
Page count: 26
Word count: 9445
Text sample:
Understanding adolescents’ exposure to and involvement with sexually-oriented television contents Abstract Different explanations for why adolescents expose themselves to sexually oriented television programs were tested. We used data of a longitudinal study in which two panels - the first starting at age 12 the second starting at age 15 - were followed in three consecutive years to explore the associations between amounts of television viewing viewer involvement viewing motives sexual maturation and channel loyalty on the one hand and
Study of Television Inheritance Effects. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media 29(2) 121-133. Webster J. G. & Lichty L. W. (1991). Rating Analysis Theory and Practice. Hillsdale NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Weinstein M. & Thornton A. (1989). Mother-child relations and adolescent sexual attitudes and behaviors. Demography 26 563-577. Zabin L. S. Hirsch M. B. Smith E. A. & Hardy J. B. (1984). Adolescent sexual attitudes & behaviors: Are they consistent? Family Planning Perspectives 16 181-185. Zimmer-Gembeck M. J. Siebenbruner


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