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Development and Validation of the Sexual Minority Adolescent Rejection Sensitivity Scale Short Form Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-06-02
William Warton, Michelle L. Byrne, Wouter J. Kiekens -
Sex Beyond the Binary: An Exploratory Analysis of Non-Binary Sexuality and Partnerships Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Fraedan Mastrantonio, Daniel A. Griffiths, Hanna Kovshoff, Heather L. Armstrong -
‘How’ Matters More Than ‘How Much’: Demographics, Usage Context, and Sexual Well-Being Related to Partnered Teledildonics Use in Men Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Éliane Dussault, Madison E. Williams, David Lafortune -
A Qualitative Content Analysis of Men's Online Discussions About Their Partner's Contraceptive Use Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
Georgia R. Breakey, Anna Chur-Hansen, Melissa Oxlad -
Eviction from manufactured home parks Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-29
Jacob Haas, Peter HepburnResidents of manufactured home parks (MHPs) generally own their homes but not the land on which those homes are located and, as a result, face unique and costly risks of eviction. The most commonly studied and understood pathway to eviction is one in which failure to pay rent puts households at risk of removal. Another pathway occurs when entire developments are shuttered, resulting in mass displacement
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Sexual Activity, Pleasure, and Testosterone: A Biopsychosocial Analysis of Women Living With and Without HIV in British Columbia, Canada. Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-29
K Mathews,S A Swann,A R Campbell,M Lee,D Pang,S Tognazzini,A Carter,M Loutfy,E M King,V Nicholson,A Kaida,H C F Côté,M C M Murray,Sexual health research comparing women with and without human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) often pathologizes women living with HIV, overlooking biopsychosocial factors that may drive differences between groups. Low testosterone levels have been reported among women living with HIV; however, how this may impact sexual health outcomes remains unclear. We compared the prevalence of sexual activity and
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To boldly go: The paradigmatic framework, coordination theory, and the quest for unified theory Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
Larry L. Constantine -
Building back better through urban blue and green space? A critical review of post-pandemic urban planning and climate governance Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Creighton Connolly, Andrew KythreotisThe implications of COVID-19 for urban planning and governance are wide ranging and have triggered a rethinking of how policies related to housing, transportation, sustainability, climate change and governance might be redeveloped to be better suited for post-pandemic cities. Over the past five years, both academic and popular accounts have highlighted commonalities between adaptations that cities
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Google urbanism 2010–2020: From infrastructural control to growing bit by bit Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Burcu BaykurtThis article examines Google’s political-economic influence in the emerging ‘digital growth machine’ through two urban-tech initiatives, Fiber and Sidewalk Labs. The findings highlight the company’s dual role as both a platform and an infrastructure, its capacity for collaboration with local governments and its iterative, experimental use of urban environments. It argues that Google’s urban-tech power
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LGBTQ+ individuals and family relationships through a life course perspective Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Gaëlle Meslay, Armin A. Dorri, Stephen T. RussellSociohistorical changes in recent decades have fundamentally altered the possibilities for LGBTQ+ family life—that is, for LGBTQ+ adults to form partnerships and enter parenthood. Through its emphasis on the role of sociohistorical change to shape individual lives and create cohorts of shared experience, life course theory (LCT) offers a distinct perspective for understanding generations of LGBTQ+
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Prompting the Machine: Introducing an LLM Data Extraction Method for Social Scientists Soc. Sci. Comput. Rev. (IF 3.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Laurence-Olivier M. Foisy, Étienne Proulx, Hubert Cadieux, Jérémy Gilbert, Jozef Rivest, Alexandre Bouillon, Yannick DufresneThis research note addresses a methodological gap in the study of large language models (LLMs) in social sciences: the absence of standardized data extraction procedures. While existing research has examined biases and the reliability of LLM-generated content, the establishment of transparent extraction protocols necessarily precedes substantive analysis. The paper introduces a replicable procedural
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Processing of Descriptive and Prescriptive Stereotypes About Men and Women and Electrophysiological Correlates. Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Fernanda Weinstein,Andrés Contreras,Vladimir López,Pablo Rodríguez-GómezGender stereotypes are a set of beliefs about men and women, including both descriptive beliefs, which refer to how men and women are, and prescriptive beliefs, which point to what men and women ought to be (e.g., Prentice & Carranza, 2002). To our knowledge, no electrophysiological studies have addressed the prescriptive dimension. Therefore, the present study pursued two main objectives: first, to
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The Scent of Intimacy: Exploring the Associations Between Intimacy, Disgust, and Olfactory Ability. Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Ellen L Murphy,Fiona E Wylie,Mehmet K MahmutIntimacy is a fundamental aspect of romantic relationships, yet its underlying sensory mechanisms remain understudied. Research has suggested that experiences of intimacy are related to both olfaction and disgust. For example, studies indicate greater olfactory ability is associated with fulfilling relationships, while heightened disgust sensitivity can hinder sexual arousal and interpersonal affiliation
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Is Sexting More of a Virtual or Gender Challenge? Factors Behind Non-Consensual Forwarding Among Adolescents Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Mónica Ojeda, María García-Jiménez, Mercedes Durán, Rosario Del ReyThe increase in unauthorized dissemination of erotic-sexual content, and the resulting forwarding chains, has emerged as a concerning manifestation of cyberviolence among adolescents that needs to be addressed. This research explored the factors associated with the persistence of involvement in, and repeated victimization through, non-consensual forwarding. A total of 2604 adolescents (53.4% female)
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Sexting for the Right Reasons: A Longitudinal Mediation Study Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-22
Sandra Meier, Silvia Marin-Dragu, Jennifer L. McArthur, Marcus Cormier, Andronika Kelso, Simal Dolek, Julie Blais, Jill Chorney, Natalie O. Rosen, Sherry H. StewartSexting is a common phenomenon. Sexting has been largely negatively portrayed as being linked to increased risks for poor mental well-being, cyberbullying, dating abuse, and intimate partner violence. However, sexting can also have positive effects and increase sexual well-being and relationship satisfaction. Therefore, the current study explored whether the motivations underlying sexting might help
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Starting from hopelessness – grand challenges, sustainable development goals, and responsible research and innovation under urgency and uncertainty J. Responsible Innov. (IF 3.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-23
Sophia Efstathiou, Mrudhula Koshy, Avijit Vinayak Pandit -
The Dual Pathways Hypothesis of Incel Harm: A Model of Harmful Attitudes and Beliefs Among Involuntary Celibates Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-21
William Costello, Joe Whittaker, Andrew G. ThomasIncels (involuntary celibates) are an online subculture of men who form their identity around a perceived inability to form sexual or romantic relationships. This community operates almost exclusively online, often serving as an outlet for misogynistic hostility. Concerns about violence from incels have positioned them as a growing (inter)national security threat. This study, the largest primary investigation
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Does Homeownership Improve Household Well-Being? A Case Study from Togo J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-21
Tchablemane Yenlide, Mawussé Komlagan Nézan OkeyThis paper analyses the impact of homeownership on household well-being in Togo. We apply the difference-in-difference method to longitudinal panel data constructed from the two waves of the Harmonized Household Living Conditions Survey in 2018 and 2021. We found homeownership’s positive and significant impact on households’ economic and subjective well-being. The results remain robust even after several
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Gender Dysphoria and Detransitioning in Adults: An Analysis of Nine Patients from a Gender Identity Clinic from Finland Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-20
Kaisa Kettula, Niina Puustinen, Lotta Tynkkynen, Liisa Lempinen, Katinka TuiskuThe aim of this study was to analyze the pathways of detransitioning, which is a rare, but serious complication of gender-affirming treatments (GATs). The patient group consisted of all patients who were referred to the Helsinki University Hospital’s Gender Identity Clinic (GIC) wanting medical treatment for detransition from 2018 to 2019. A new assessment was made systematically and retrospective
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Sex Differences in Sexual Motivation Among U.S. Residents 57–85 Years of Age Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-19
Elissa H. Patterson, Linda J. Waite, Martha K. McClintockSexual motivation includes proceptivity (mental or physical pursuit of sexual gratification) and receptivity (openness to having sex initiated by someone else). The roles of these two components are not well understood in older adults past reproductive age. We quantify these components and their associations with sexual activity along with differences in sex, age, partner status, health, reproductive
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Finding Frames With BERT: A Transformer-Based Approach to Generic News Frame Detection Soc. Sci. Comput. Rev. (IF 3.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-20
Vihang Jumle, Mykola Makhortykh, Maryna Sydorova, Victoria VziatyshevaFraming is among the most extensively used concepts in the field of communication science. The availability of digital data offers new possibilities for studying how specific aspects of social reality are made more salient in online communication, but also raises challenges related to the scaling of framing analysis and its adoption to new research areas (e.g. studying the impact of artificial intelligence-powered
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It’s Like Disney … You Have to Find Them a Fantasy: Latino Sexual Minority Men at the Intersection of Tourism, Sex, Drug Use, and HIV in Miami-South Beach Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-20
José F. Colón Burgos, Adam W. Carrico, Mance E. Buttram, Alexi Diaz-Leon, Victor Buitron, Christian Grov, Mario De La Rosa, Mark PadillaThis ethnographic study examined multi-level vulnerabilities and social factors contributing to HIV/AIDS and methamphetamine (meth) use among Latinx Sexual Minority Men (Latinx SMM) working in the tourism sector of South Beach. Guided by Padilla's Ecological multi-level conceptual framework of tourism areas, we aimed to contribute to strategies that address the parallel epidemics of HIV/AIDS and meth
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Same‐sex marriage in Asia: Understanding intra‐regional differences in development Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-19
Yiu Tung SuenIn the last decade, legal recognition of same‐sex marriage has been rapidly developing in Asia. This article asks: what is the current state of development of same‐sex marriage across Asian societies? What explains the development of same‐sex marriage seen in some Asian societies but not others? It finds that demographic explanations are least able to explain intra‐regional differences in the development
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Call for Commentaries: How Many Sexes Are There? How Many Genders Are There? Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-19
Kenneth J Zucker -
Creating Kinship with Nature and Boosting Well-Being: Testing Two Novel Character Strengths-Based Nature Connectedness Interventions J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-16
Holli-Anne Passmore, Ryan Lumber, Ryan Niemiec, Levi I. SofenWe tested the efficacy of engaging in two novel randomized interventions based on character strengths and engaging with nature on boosting nature connectedness and well-being. In Study 1 (N = 134, international community adults) and Study 2 (N = 106, Canadian university students), participants were tasked with noticing how their character strengths were displayed in nature (CinN intervention). In Study
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“It’s More Important Than Ever for Men to Play a Role”: Women’s Perspectives on Safe Sex Responsibilities Following the Dobbs Decision Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-16
Erin Nolen, Kyla Cary, Rebecca R. Mendoza, Shetal Vohra-Gupta, Catherine CubbinThe Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision in June 2022 revoked the constitutional right to abortion and left abortion policy jurisdiction up to the states. Data were collected in November 2022 through Prolific, a research participant recruitment service, to assess participants' perspectives on safe sex responsibilities in light of the Dobbs decision. Participants were 339 U.S. cisgender
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Sensory Responsiveness, Sexual Mindful Awareness, and Sexual Satisfaction Among Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse: A Cross-Sectional Mediation Analysis Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-16
Rachel Hasson, Ada Talmon, Karni GinzburgPrevious studies have demonstrated that a history of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is associated with reduced sexual satisfaction among adult survivors. Recent studies have suggested that survivors of traumatic experiences may display sensory modulation dysfunction, manifested as either over- or under-responsiveness to sensory stimuli. In this study we examined a moderated mediation model according
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Sociodemographic Disparities in Positive Life Experiences J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-12
Naomi Podber, Tara L. GruenewaldIndividuals’ daily positive life experiences, from having a good conversation to taking a relaxing bath, may be thought of as mundane, but when added together they may be key contributors to making life meaningful and enjoyable. Some individuals, however, may have more frequent access to positive life experiences or may be able to enjoy them more. We used data from the Midlife Development in the US
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Older people’s participation in responsible research and innovation. A qualitative study on motivation J. Responsible Innov. (IF 3.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-09
Kristi Bjørnes Skeie, Catharina Margaretha van Leersum, Elin Merethe Oftedal -
Dynamic capabilities and digital innovation: pathways to competitive advantage through responsible innovation J. Responsible Innov. (IF 3.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-09
Alicia de la Torre, Iván De la Vega -
Cultivating theoretical advances in family science: JFTR's innovation continues Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-09
Katherine R. Allen -
Sexual and gender diversity in families: Theoretical advances in the context of social change Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-09
Stephen T. Russell, Gaëlle MeslayThis special collection aims to extend understanding of LGBTQ+ couples and families from multiple theoretical and international perspectives, in the context of remarkable sociohistorical change. Five articles address changes in LGBTQ+ family patterns—and within LGBTQ+ families, attending to differences across generations and considering contextual and cultural differences. Together these articles offer
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Flow and Abiding Interest: An Experiential Perspective on Identity Maintenance and Development in Later Life J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Kevin RathundeAn experiential perspective on identity development is presented here and focuses on the importance of flow experiences for developing abiding interests, or long-term interests that form the core of a person’s identity. The perspective shares similarities with the exploration/commitment dynamic incorporated in much identity research but suggests how experiences like flow can help regulate and motivate
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Affirming the Less Defended Self: Quiet Ego Reminders Reduce Implicit Self-Other Bias J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Heidi A. WaymentThe quiet ego reflects psychological mechanisms that enable individuals to interpret themselves and others less defensively by balancing concerns for the welfare and growth of both (Bauer & Weatherbie, 2023). Two experimental studies tested the hypothesis that listening to brief reminders of four quiet ego characteristics would reduce a common form of defensiveness: self-other bias. In Study 1, female
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Gender Minority Stressors, Hopelessness, and Their Associations with Internalizing and Externalizing Mental Health Outcomes in a Hungarian Trans Adult Sample Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-07
Banu C. Ünsal, Zsolt Demetrovics, Melinda ReinhardtAlthough distal (i.e., discrimination, victimization, rejection, and nonaffirmation) and proximal (i.e., internalized transphobia, negative expectations, and identity nondisclosure) gender minority stressors are associated with internalizing (i.e., depression, anxiety, suicidality) and externalizing (i.e., substance use) mental health outcomes of trans individuals, how they are related to two distinct
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First impressions matter: Mundane obstacles to a forensic device for probabilistic reporting in fingerprint analysis Social Studies of Science (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-07
Simon A Cole, Justin L SolaThis article investigates why statistical reasoning has had little impact on the practice of friction ridge (or ‘fingerprint’) examination, despite both interest and some modest scientific progress toward this goal. Previous research has attributed this lack of results to practitioner resistance and legal apathy. This article seeks to complement those explanations through interviews with experts with
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A Study on Childhood Trauma and Sexual Narcissism in Individuals with Compulsive Sexual Behavior Receiving Counseling Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Rotem Yaakov, Aviv WeinsteinCompulsive sexual behavior (CSB) has been associated with trauma and neglect in childhood. There is evidence that CSB is related to child physical and sexual abuse. Sexual narcissism was linked with aggression, sex at a young age, and many partners for sex. This study examined the associations between childhood abuse and neglect, sexual narcissism, and hypersexual behavior among participants of a sex
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Killing us with slow poison: Organizing infrastructural violence and work at an internal frontier Hum. Relat. (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Devi Vijay, Abrar SaiyedThis study focuses on the people inhabiting an internal frontier of global capital marked by the zone of a waste landfill and its surrounding industrial belt. While the external frontiers of capitalist accumulation are traceable to identifiable corporations, internal frontiers involve ambiguous work and organizational relations. We draw on fieldwork at a settlement near a waste landfill in Ahmedabad
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Embracing age: How Catholic nuns became models of aging well. By Anna I.Corwin. 2021. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. 2021. pp. 202. $32.95 (paperback). ISBN: 9781978822276 Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Jaclyn Elisa Keenoy, Fatima Hernandez Torrez, Natalia Taylor -
Making a show of it: Reading demonstrations of empty government innovation through the metaphor of façade Social Studies of Science (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Santtu RäisänenThis article examines meaning-making in a governmental technology demonstration, and its significance in the production of a durable artifice of innovation. STS literature has largely engaged with technology demonstrations in the context of commercial technology products, and through the lens of public knowledge-making: as events that elicit credence in matters-of-fact. I contribute to this discussion
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“The eyes and ears of the railway”: How frontline workers uphold safety through their occupational expertise and embodied epistemic authority Hum. Relat. (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Daniel Fisher, Daisy ChungFrontline workers who occupy public-facing, non-managerial roles are critical to the ongoing sociotechnical accomplishment of safety in complex systems, yet their role is often overlooked in relation to organizational safety programs, protocols, and training. In this paper, we examine how frontline workers make judgments about potential hazards during routine work and how they respond to organizational
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Stepping together Journal of Family Theory & Review (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Lawrence Ganong, Marilyn ColemanWe present our shared research journey. To place it in context, we briefly describe the history of stepfamily scholarship in four phases, highlighting our roles. We reflect on our mutual experiences as spouses who were research partners, and finish with thoughts about our contributions to the field. Although we occasionally examined sociocultural contexts within which stepfamilies lived, most of our
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Charting Salivary Oxytocin Across an Episode of Naturally Occurring Partnered Sex Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Amanda Denes, Margaret Bennett-Brown, John P. Crowley, Anuraj Dhillon, Talea Cornelius, John L. Stebbins, Steve W. GrangerOxytocin (OXT) has been linked to sexual behavior across several studies. However, scant work exists that investigates OXT concentrations across a sexual encounter and researchers have yet to examine OXT concentrations during partnered sexual activity in the home environment. In the present study, a non-clinical sample of 49 mixed-sex (i.e., 49 women, 49 men) young adult romantic partners were invited
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Turning the wheel on active transportation: Shifts in policymaking and planning for cycling and pedestrian infrastructure during the COVID-19 pandemic in large urban areas Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Remington Latanville, Raktim MitraThe COVID-19 pandemic presented an opportunity to re-think how urban transportation policy and planning can address public needs through street reallocations for active transportation. Borrowing from Critical Junctures and Punctuated Equilibrium Theory, we propose a framework for understanding abrupt changes in transportation policy and to explain what may have triggered and shaped the actions related
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Anticipatory climate governance: Limits to current practices in Montreal Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Hélène Madénian, Sophie L Van Neste, Alexis GuillemardCity leadership appears key in driving the transition towards a liveable future. Trying to bring specific visions of the future into present decisions and actions is what anticipatory governance is about. However, the literature has highlighted a lack of discussion of the use of anticipatory practices in urban climate governance. What anticipatory practices do cities employ to tackle climate change
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Responsibility for managing values. The metaethical dilemma between normative absolutism and relativism J. Responsible Innov. (IF 3.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Jan Franciszek Jacko -
A Theory-Driven Approach to Fake News/Information Disorder Analysis and Explanation via Target-Based Emotion–Stance Analysis (TESA) and Interpretive Graph Generation (IGG) Soc. Sci. Comput. Rev. (IF 3.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Xingyu Ken Chen, Jin-Cheon NaInformation disorder (IDO) presents a persistent challenge to society, necessitating innovative approaches to understanding its dynamics beyond just merely detecting it. This study introduces a theory-driven framework that integrates advanced natural language processing (NLP) with deep learning, utilizing the target-based emotion–stance analysis (TESA) approach to analyze emotion and stance dynamics
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The Efficacy of Large Language Models and Crowd Annotation for Accurate Content Analysis of Political Social Media Messages Soc. Sci. Comput. Rev. (IF 3.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Brian McKernan, Saklain Zaman, Chinmay Maganur, Sampada RegmiSystematic content analysis of messaging has been a staple method in the study of communication. While computer-assisted content analysis has been used in the field for three decades, advances in machine learning and crowd-based annotation combined with the ease of collecting volumes of text-based communication via social media have made the opportunities for classification of messages easier and faster
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Perceived Greenspace Exposure and Children’s Emotional Well-Being in Daily Life: Comparisons between Children Living in Urban and Rural Areas J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Wei Cui, Jianjie Xu, Fenghua Tang, Mengyu Miranda Gao, Yiwen Zheng, Donghua Zhou, Shangqing Yang, Zhuo Rachel HanGreenspace exposure (including the amount of time spent, vegetation coverage, and the number of greenspace attributes) has been shown to enhance children’s well-being (including fewer emotional problems and more happiness). However, the day-to-day associations between perceived greenspace exposure and children’s emotional well-being and potential rural-urban differences remain unclear. A total of 509
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“I’m Trusting You with My Body”: A Qualitative Examination of the Role of Trust in Safer Sexual Decision-Making Among Black Women Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-29
Jasmine Abrams, Abigail Pollock, Emily Tillett, Lex Ashcroft, Mia Levine, Jaleah Rutledge, Cristian ChandlerBlack women are disproportionately impacted by HIV, such that they are diagnosed at eight times the rate of White women and three times that of Latinas. Given that HIV transmission among Black women is primarily attributed to heterosexual sex, it is imperative to better understand factors that influence Black women’s sexual health decision-making. Previous studies have highlighted the influence of
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Urban solidarities in late modern times: Interspaces for meaningful engagement in Los Angeles and Amsterdam Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Elena Ponzoni, Tara Rose Fiorito, Halleh GhorashiLate modern urban spaces marked by heterogeneity, forced proximity, intersecting layers of difference and normalised structures of inequality and marginalisation, require rethinking the conditions for an urban ethics of solidarity. Such an ethics of solidarity needs to go beyond notions of large collective movements based on shared values or claims and beyond demarcated communities. We explore the
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The urban water–energy nexus in Cape Town, Los Angeles and Maputo: The ambivalent role of cross-sector coordination for urban sustainability Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Shaun SmithCities are increasingly encouraged to adopt cross-sector coordination mechanisms and visions as a response to complex urban sustainability challenges. However, infrastructure governance remains highly fragmented, with limited understanding of how and why coordination emerges, what issues it prioritises and whether these selective forms effectively address or obscure deeper structural challenges. This
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Visible presence, unseen hand: Royalty and reality in the reshaping of Bangkok Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Michael HerzfeldThis article addresses royal agency in the current urban development of Bangkok. During the reign of King Bhumibol, the image of the just and generous monarch who followed the precepts of dharma was assiduously maintained and visibly promoted. Despite the palace’s known control of great wealth, the king’s embrace of moderation as Buddhist virtue (‘sufficiency economy’) in the face of the consumerism
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“It was the Best Sex of My Life”: A Qualitative Analysis of Black Women’s Most Pleasurable Sexual Experiences Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Praise Iyiewuare, Kaylee A. Palomino, Brenice Duroseau, Shemeka ThorpeSexual pleasure is an integral component of sexual health, human rights, and overall wellbeing and can be a helpful lens for understanding the agency and freedom present at the individual, relational, and community level. Further, one's most pleasurable sexual experience can be a pivotal moment that allows for expanded understandings of pleasure and can change how one structures future sexual experiences
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Body Image, Self-Esteem, and Attitudes Toward Sexuality in Older Adults with Chronic Illnesses Arch. Sex. Behav. (IF 2.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-28
Hediye Özbay, Adil Utli, Nilay Filoğlu ErsüThis study aimed to examine the effect of the association between body image and self-esteem levels on attitudes toward sexuality in older adults with chronic illnesses. The research was descriptive, cross-sectional, and correlational. The study sample comprised 1,004 people over the age of 65 who visited family health centers in a province in the east of Türkiye. The Older Person’s Description Form
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Waze seating in the control room: Enacting the data bricolage in urban traffic management in Santiago de Chile Urban Studies (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-29
Ignacio Pérez KarichThis study examines Waze’s role in Santiago de Chile’s traffic management, emphasising its use in control rooms. Using ethnographic methods, including observations and interviews, the research demonstrates how analysts employ formal and informal data, with Waze playing a central role, in their operational decision-making. The findings illustrate the dual role of Waze: as a tool for enhancing on-the-spot
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Exploring Gender Disparities in Experiences of Being Hacked Using Twitter Data: A Focus on the Third-Level Digital Divide Soc. Sci. Comput. Rev. (IF 3.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-29
Ern Chern Khor, Moon ChoiDespite millions of hacked accounts fueling cybercrime, research on the hacking experience, particularly sociodemographic aspects, remains sparse. This study examines the experience of being hacked with a focus on gender disparities from the perspective of the third-level digital divide—socially constructed gaps of digital use outcomes even among users with similar digital access and skills. Analyzing
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Masturbation Trajectories from Late Adolescence into Mid-Adulthood: A Population-Based Longitudinal Study Journal of Sex Research (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-04-29
Anna Ivanova, Sam Fluit, Nantje Fischer, Tilmann von Soest, Michal KozákMasturbation with its numerous health benefits is an integral aspect of most people's sexuality and is typically observed across all stages of life. However, longitudinal studies exploring the frequencies of masturbation across major life phases are lacking. We examined the development of masturbation frequencies from ages 19-50 via multilevel growth curve modeling with a longitudinal population-based
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Cultural Diffusion and Happiness: A New Evidence in Sub Saharan Africa J. Happiness Stud. (IF 3.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-28
Cyrille Bergali Kamdem, Thierry Mamadou Asngar, Bruno Emmanuel Ongo Nkoa, Blaise Ondoua BeyeneThe main objective of this paper is to analyse the effects of culture on happiness in Sub-Saharan Africa. Based on a sample of 33 countries observed over the period from 2006 to 2020, we specify and estimate a panel data model using the system generalized method of moments (SGMM). The results show that culture significantly increases happiness in Sub-Saharan Africa. To test the robustness of the results