Voyeurism - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics Voyeurism Voyeurism is one of many non-contact sex offenses, such as public masturbation and sexual harassment It refers to a sexual interest in, or the practice of spying on, people engaged in intimate or private behaviors, such as undressing, sexual acts, urinating, or defecating This includes “perpetrators looking through windows with the hope of seeing people in various states of
Voyeurism - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics Voyeurism, or scopophilia as it is sometimes called, is of theoretical interest beyond its forensic implications First, there is a tendency for most people to look at sexually interesting scenes In some, looking is preferred to actually participating, presumably because real contact is too threatening for one reason or another
How exhibitionism and voyeurism contribute to engagement in SNS use . . . Furthermore, exhibitionism and voyeurism have indirect effects on intensity of SNS use through content production and content consumption These findings support empirical evidence that the relationship between individuals’ psychological traits and their intensity of SNS use may be in fact mediated through content use
How exhibitionism and voyeurism contribute to engagement in SNS use . . . Meanwhile, exhibitionism and voyeurism are positively related to the intensity of SNS use through content production and content consumption Except for the direct association between exhibitionism and content production, voyeurism is directly associated with content consumption
The impact of childhood trauma, personality, and sexuality on the . . . The DSM-5 proposes eight categories of paraphilic disorder: Voyeurism (e g , achieving sexual arousal from observing an unsuspecting and non-consenting person who is naked or engaged in sexual activity), exhibitionism (e g , exposing genitals to unsuspecting strangers and becoming sexually aroused by it), frotteurism (e g , touching or rubbing
What can Hitchcock teach us about psychopathology? Part 2: Voyeurism . . . Another of Hitchcock's classic films, Rear Window (1954), concerns voyeurism and obsession Voyeurism in DSM 5 (APA, 2013) is diagnosed as having intense sexual arousal from observing a person who is naked, engaging in sexual activity or in the process of disrobing Akin to the first paper (Bhugra, 2020, p 100015), when applying these criteria for Voyeuristic Disorder in relation to Hitchcock
Audiencing Jamie Oliver: Embarrassment, voyeurism and reflexive . . . Voyeurism as an audience position, far from being contradictory, is actually entirely complementary to this process because the reflexive positioning is partially constructed through discrediting this voyeurism, relegating it to the realm of frivolous pleasure Being reflexive about voyeurism provides the material from which to critique the self
Frotteurism - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics Voyeurism is the act of peeping in windows for the purpose of watching unsuspecting persons (usually women) who are undressing, already naked, or who are engaging in sexual acts
Audiencing Jamie Oliver: Embarrassment, voyeurism and reflexive . . . The paper foregrounds observation of actual audiences’ emotional experiences like embarrassment and voyeurism, because they are an indication of the role of media in the production and maintenance of relationships to people and place These cover a range of experiences from the unpleasant and undesirable to the illicit and enjoyable