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Lee A. Jackson

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Wilmington

Publications -  18
Citations -  707

Lee A. Jackson is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Wilmington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Moral reasoning. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 18 publications receiving 693 citations.

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Body figure preferences of men and women: A comparison of two generations.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated some potential determinants of the most recent increase of eating disorders among women in this country and found that the most common eating disorders were associated with the same generation cohort as these students' parents.
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Violent Attitudes and Deferred Academic Aspirations: Deleterious Effects of Exposure to Rap Music

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess the effects of exposure to rap music on the attitudes and perceptions of young African-American males and find that subjects in the violent exposure conditions expressed greater acceptance of the use of violence.
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Justice is Still Not Colorblind: Differential Racial Effects of Exposure to Inadmissible Evidence

TL;DR: In this article, an experiment was conducted to assess whether the effects of inadmissible information in a simulated criminal trial is moderated by race, and the significant interaction between information admissibility and the defendant's race was found to be stronger when the defendant was Black.
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Assessing the effects of factors that might underlie the differential perception of acquaintance and stranger rape

TL;DR: For instance, this paper found that the victim is perceived less favorably and there is more leniency toward the perpetrator than in a stranger rape when there is ambiguity in the victim's desire for intercourse.
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The effects of alcohol and cue salience on young men's acceptance of sexual aggression.

TL;DR: Overall, findings showed that key individual difference factors from Malamuth's Confluence Model enhance precision of predicting sexual aggression risk by young men under the influence of alcohol.