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Parenthood and Glee: An online study to examine differences between viewers and non-viewers of televisions shows featuring a character with a developmental disability

Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, Ahead of Print.
We present findings from our study, which examined whether ability to identify Down syndrome and autism was linked to participants’ willingness to maintain social contact with individuals with the respective conditions. Additionally, we explored whether viewers and non-viewers of Parenthood and Glee, television shows featuring a character with autism and Down syndrome respectively, differed in their awareness, beliefs regarding causes and interventions, and desire to maintain social proximity with individuals with these conditions. Participants completed an online survey, which included vignettes based on Max, the character with autism from Parenthood and Becky, the character with Down syndrome from Glee as well as the adapted Intellectual Disabilities Literacy Scale. Based on 300 responses, key differences were noted in the hypothesized direction on the assessed variables (symptom recognition, causal beliefs, and treatment beliefs) between Parenthood and Glee viewers and non-viewers. Findings are discussed in the context of practical implications and methodological limitations.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 04/26/2024 | Link to this post on IFP |
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