The International Encyclopedia of Media Psychology 2020
DOI: 10.1002/9781119011071.iemp0271
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Gender and Media Preferences in Adulthood

Abstract: In addition to reflecting gender‐targeted media content, men's and women's media habits may reflect a host of complex motivations and consequences, in step with larger cultural norms regarding gender roles. For example, men's greater interest in violent and/or sexually explicit media content may reflect gendered socialization practices that inhibit women from seeking out such traditionally male‐dominated genres, as well as sexist or sexually objectifying content that may decrease women's interest in such genre… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…First, males and females differ in their media preferences. Men tend to prefer video games, violence, and pornography (Dufour et al, 2016), while women are more attracted to social network sites and instant messaging applications (Coyne et al, 2020;Greenwood & Winn, 2020). This preference for social media may lead girls to experience more social overload and, consequently, more SMF (Maier, Laumer, Eckhardt, & Weitzel, 2015;Maier, Laumer, Weinert, & Weitzel, 2015;Yan et al, 2023).…”
Section: Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, males and females differ in their media preferences. Men tend to prefer video games, violence, and pornography (Dufour et al, 2016), while women are more attracted to social network sites and instant messaging applications (Coyne et al, 2020;Greenwood & Winn, 2020). This preference for social media may lead girls to experience more social overload and, consequently, more SMF (Maier, Laumer, Eckhardt, & Weitzel, 2015;Maier, Laumer, Weinert, & Weitzel, 2015;Yan et al, 2023).…”
Section: Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%