What's normal? Influencing women's perceptions of normal genitalia: an experiment involving exposure to modified and nonmodified images

Objective Examine women's perceptions of what is ‘normal’ and ‘desirable’ in female genital appearance. Design Experiment with random allocation across three conditions. Setting Community. Sample A total of 97 women aged 18–30 years. Methods Women were randomly assigned to view a series of imag...

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Veröffentlicht in:BJOG : an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology 2014-05, Vol.121 (6), p.761-766
Hauptverfasser: Moran, C, Lee, C
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective Examine women's perceptions of what is ‘normal’ and ‘desirable’ in female genital appearance. Design Experiment with random allocation across three conditions. Setting Community. Sample A total of 97 women aged 18–30 years. Methods Women were randomly assigned to view a series of images of (1) surgically modified vulvas or (2) nonmodified vulvas, or (3) no images. They then viewed and rated ten target images of surgically modified vulvas and ten of unmodified vulvas. Main outcome measures Women used a four‐point Likert scale (‘strongly agree’ to ‘strongly disagree’), to rate each target image for ‘looks normal’ and ‘represents society's ideal’. For each woman, we created two summary scores that represented the extent to which she rated the unmodified vulvas as more ‘normal’ and more ‘society's ideal’ than the modified vulvas. Results For ratings of ‘normality,’ there was a significant effect for condition (F2,94 = 2.75 P = 0.007, radj2 = 0.082): women who had first viewed the modified images rated the modified target vulvas as more normal than the nonmodified vulvas, significantly different from the control group, who rated them as less normal. For ratings of ‘society's ideal’, there was again a significant effect for condition (F2,92 = 7.72, P 
ISSN:1470-0328
1471-0528
DOI:10.1111/1471-0528.12578