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      Conflict and Victimization in Online Drug Markets

      1 , 1 , 2
      Victims & Offenders
      Informa UK Limited

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          Social Change and Crime Rate Trends: A Routine Activity Approach

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            The online disinhibition effect.

            John Suler (2004)
            While online, some people self-disclose or act out more frequently or intensely than they would in person. This article explores six factors that interact with each other in creating this online disinhibition effect: dissociative anonymity, invisibility, asynchronicity, solipsistic introjection, dissociative imagination, and minimization of authority. Personality variables also will influence the extent of this disinhibition. Rather than thinking of disinhibition as the revealing of an underlying "true self," we can conceptualize it as a shift to a constellation within self-structure, involving clusters of affect and cognition that differ from the in-person constellation.
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              Sensitive questions in surveys.

              Psychologists have worried about the distortions introduced into standardized personality measures by social desirability bias. Survey researchers have had similar concerns about the accuracy of survey reports about such topics as illicit drug use, abortion, and sexual behavior. The article reviews the research done by survey methodologists on reporting errors in surveys on sensitive topics, noting parallels and differences from the psychological literature on social desirability. The findings from the survey studies suggest that misreporting about sensitive topics is quite common and that it is largely situational. The extent of misreporting depends on whether the respondent has anything embarrassing to report and on design features of the survey. The survey evidence also indicates that misreporting on sensitive topics is a more or less motivated process in which respondents edit the information they report to avoid embarrassing themselves in the presence of an interviewer or to avoid repercussions from third parties. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Victims & Offenders
                Victims & Offenders
                Informa UK Limited
                1556-4886
                1556-4991
                April 03 2022
                June 28 2021
                April 03 2022
                : 17
                : 3
                : 350-371
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Criminology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
                [2 ]Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
                Article
                10.1080/15564886.2021.1943090
                03a3c5b9-c2c5-4172-901e-f1752492e4d8
                © 2022
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