Abstract
Social media communication is a promising way to deliver important health messages about sexual violence to a key population of adolescent men. The researchers conducted an online, between-participants experiment to examine the impact of personal narrative TikToks about sexual violence on adolescent men. Participants were adolescent men (n = 580) aged 15 to 19 (M = 17.3, SD = 1.43). Participants were randomly assigned to treatment (personal narrative TikToks about sexual violence) or control (hair braiding TikTok tutorials) conditions. Adolescent men who viewed personal narrative TikToks about sexual violence had higher knowledge of consequences and higher perceived severity of sexual violence. Additionally, adolescent men found personal narrative TikToks more attention-grabbing (vs. control) and did not have negative reactions. Findings that short (approximately one-minute) TikTok videos led to differences in knowledge and beliefs among, and were interesting and not aversive to, adolescent men are important for sexual violence prevention research. Health messages on TikTok can help shift adolescent perceptions of sexual violence, which is a key starting point towards changing norms.
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SN conceived of the study, participated in its design, coordination, analyses, and presentation, and drafted the manuscript; AJL participated in study design, analyses, presentation, and helped to draft the manuscript; LLA participated in study design and helped to draft the manuscript; DF participated in study design and helped to draft the manuscript; HLMR participated in study design and helped to draft the manuscript; KEM participated in study design and helped to draft the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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Nicolla, S., Lazard, A.J., Austin, L.L. et al. TikToks Lead to Higher Knowledge and Perceived Severity of Sexual Violence among Adolescent Men. J. Youth Adolescence 52, 2449–2463 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-023-01867-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-023-01867-7