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To: Uncle Chip
Because this statement is over the top:

"Unbeknownst to them, rapists clearly target victims based on their likelihood of conception."

and without evidence in the article.

I've already posted the evidence in the article twice now. Here it is for a third time:

"most rapes occur in women under 25, and pre-pubescent girls, post-menopausal women and visibly pregnant women are statistically underrepresented among female rape victims, according to Gordon Gallup, an evolutionary psychologist at SUNY-Albany who wrote about rape-related pregnancy in The Oxford Handbook of Sexual Conflict in Humans."

430 posted on 08/23/2012 8:34:54 AM PDT by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 428 | View Replies ]


To: JustSayNoToNannies

Gordon G. Gallup
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gordon G. Gallup, Jr. (born 1941) is a psychologist of the University at Albany’s Psychology department, researching biopsychology. He received his Ph.D. from Washington State University in 1968, after which he joined the faculty of the Psychology Department at Tulane University. He is best known for developing the mirror test, also called the mirror self-recognition test, or MSR, in 1970, which gauges self-awareness of animals. In 1975, Gallup moved to the University at Albany.

During his tenure at Tulane, Gallup also developed a research interest in tonic immobility, or “animal hypnosis,” which he continued at the University at Albany. His later work on animal behavior was concerned with ethological approaches to the study of animal behavior under laboratory conditions, which he pursued with Susan Suarez in the 1980s.

Since the 1990s, Gallup has researched human evolutionary psychology exclusively. Gallup’s article entitled “Does Semen Have Antidepressant Properties?”[1] attracted the attention of the media[2] when it was published in 2002. Gallup commented, “I want to make it clear that we are not advocating that people abstain from using condoms, clearly an unwanted pregnancy or a sexually transmitted disease would more than offset any advantageous psychological effects of semen.”
[edit]Publications

Gallup, G.G., Jr. (1970). Chimpanzees: Self Recognition. Science, 167, 86-87.
Gallup, G. G., Jr. (l977). Self-recognition in primates: A comparative approach to the bidirectional properties of consciousness. American Psychologist, 32, 329-338.
Gallup, G. G., Jr., Burch, R. L., & Platek, S. M. (2002). Does semen have antidepressant properties? Archives of Sexual Behavior, 31, 289-293.
Hughes, S.M., Dispenza, F., Gallup, G.G., Jr., (2004). Ratings of voice attractiveness predict sexual behavior and body configuration. Evolution and Human Behavior, 25, 295-304.
Platek, S.M., Burch, R.L., Panyavin, I.S., Wasserman, B.H., & Gallup, G.G., Jr. (2002).Reactions to children’s faces: Resemblance affects males more than females. Evolution and Human Behavior, 23, 159-166 .
[edit]References

^ Gallup, G. G., Jr., Burch, R. L., & Platek, S. M. (2002). Does semen function as an antidepressant? Archives of Sexual Behavior, 31, 289-293.
^ Raj Persaud (2002). Semen acts as an anti-depressant. New Scientist.
[edit]External links

Faculty page
Human Behavior and Evolution Laboratory


431 posted on 08/23/2012 8:39:48 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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