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Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 30, No. 5, 629-642 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0146167203262076
© 2004 Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

Implicit and Explicit Measures of Sexual Orientation Attitudes: In Group Preferences and Related Behaviors and Beliefs among Gay and Straight Men

William A. Jellison

Michigan State University, jellison{at}msu.edu

Allen R. McConnell

Miami University

Shira Gabriel

State University of New York at Buffalo

The relations among implicit and explicit measures of sexual orientation attitudes and sexual-orientation-related behavior and beliefs among gay men (Study 1) and straight men (Studies 1 and 2) were explored. Study 1 found relations between implicit and explicit measures of sexual orientation attitudes, large differences between gay and straight men on both implicit and explicit measures, and that these measures predicted sexual-orientation-related behaviors among gay men. Also, only straight men exhibited a negative relation between their attitudes toward homosexuality and heterosexuality. Study 2 found that as straight men held more negative attitudes toward homosexuality, they more strongly endorsed the importance of heterosexual identity and of traditional masculine gender roles. These endorsements mediated the negative relation between their attitudes toward heterosexuality and homosexuality. Implications for assessing attitudes toward sexual orientation and their relations for sexual orientation identity are discussed.

Key Words: attitudes • sexual orientation • implicit measures • IAT


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