Posts by rzito | Today at Elon | 51爆料网 /u/news Thu, 30 Apr 2026 19:12:04 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Sociology and anthropology students shine at SURF /u/news/2026/04/30/sociology-and-anthropology-students-shine-at-surf/ Thu, 30 Apr 2026 17:54:28 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045908
Morgan Murphy ’26 presents at SURF

Sociology and anthropology students at 51爆料网 develop research skills and gain hands-on experience conducting original studies with real-world impact. The products of their research were on display at 51爆料网’s Spring Undergraduate Research Forum (SURF) on April 28, 2026.

Examples of sociology and anthropology student research presented at SURF included:

  • Lily Andresen-Simmons’s “College Student Narrations of Moral Formation” (mentored by Devin Proctor)
  • Emma Hash’s “Parental Perspectives: A Sociological Analysis of Adoptive Parents During the One-Child Policy” (mentored by Tom Arcaro)
  • Morgan Murphy’s “Constructing Serial Homicide: Media Framing of Serial Killers, their Victims, and their Crimes” (mentored by Rena Zito)
  • Mallory Otten’s “Beauty and Blame: How Gender and Attractiveness Shape Perceptions of Heterosexual Intimate Partner Violence” (mentored by Rena Zito)
  • Dani Rudd’s “Toward Values-Aligned AI Use: An Authenticity-Based Framework” (mentored by Alexis Franzese)
  • Avery Shipp’s “Understanding the Everyday: Investigating Ancient Maya Society in the City of Dos Hombres Through Household Archaeology” (mentored by Rissa Trachman)

    Emma Hash ’26 presents at SURF
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Mallory Otten 鈥26, Rena Zito present research at sociology conference /u/news/2026/04/21/mallory-otten-26-rena-zito-present-research-at-sociology-conference/ Tue, 21 Apr 2026 16:31:08 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044119 Lumen Scholar and public health major Mallory Otten 鈥26 and her faculty mentor, Associate Professor of Sociology Rena Zito, presented their research, 鈥淧erpetrator Gender, Sexuality, and Perceptions of Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence from
an Experimental Vignette Study” at the annual meeting of the Southern Sociological Society on April 11 in Jacksonville, Florida. Their talk was included in the Crime, Law, and Deviance Mini-Conference.

Mallory Otten 鈥26

Otten and Zito’s research聽examined how gender and sexual orientation shape public perceptions of intimate partner violence (IPV). Using a nationally representative survey experiment with more than 1,600 U.S. adults, participants were shown the same IPV scenario, but with the perpetrator鈥檚 gender and sexual orientation changed across versions. They found that people judged heterosexual male perpetrators most harshly, while gay male perpetrators and heterosexual female perpetrators were seen as less culpable, less dangerous and less deserving of punishment. Lesbian perpetrators fell in between, suggesting that judgments about violence are shaped by assumptions about who is capable of causing harm and who is seen as a 鈥渞eal鈥 victim.

The study draws attention to how stereotypes about masculinity, femininity and sexuality influence responses to abuse. Because intimate partner violence is often framed as a 鈥渨omen鈥檚 issue,鈥 violence against men 鈥斅 especially gay men 鈥 can be minimized or dismissed. In contrast, women perpetrators may be seen as less threatening. These perceptions matter because they affect whether victims seek help, how law enforcement and courts respond and whether survivors are believed in the first place.

Zito also presented a study titled “‘It’s Never Stopped Me Doing Anything I Wanted to Do’: Disability (Dis)Identification in Tourette Syndrome” as part of the Disability & Health session. The research explored how adults with Tourette Syndrome (TS) understand and articulate their condition in relation to disability, including how they position themselves as disabled, non-disabled or in-between. Based on 30 in-depth interviews, Zito found that disability identity is shaped less by聽how people interpret their experiences rather than simply by tic severity. Some rejected the disability label, equating disability with physical incapacitation and having a limited life, while others embraced it by pointing to chronic pain, workplace barriers, stigma and public scrutiny. Many fell somewhere in between, describing TS as disabling at times but hesitating to claim disability status. The research shows that TS exists in the 鈥渂orderlands鈥 of disability, where identity is influenced by cultural ideas about normality and what counts as a 鈥渞eal鈥 disability.

The Lumen Prize supported Otten’s research. Zito’s research was supported by an 51爆料网 Summer Research Fellowship.

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Sociology and Anthropology celebrates honor society inductees and graduating seniors /u/news/2026/04/21/sociology-and-anthropology-celebrates-honor-society-inductees-and-graduating-seniors/ Tue, 21 Apr 2026 16:25:02 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044833 The Department of Sociology and Anthropology hosted a celebratory dinner for graduating majors and honor society inductees on April 16. The event featured guest speaker Raea Tyson ’23, who shared wisdom about the importance of sociology and anthropology in crafting a better world, a pursuit she has taken on as a third-year Ph.D candidate in sociology at North Carolina State University, studying food insecurity.

The highlights of the event included the induction of sociology students into Alpha Kappa Delta, the International Honor Society of Sociology and of anthropology students into Lambda Alpha, the National Anthropology Honor Society.

The department also celebrated Avery Shipp, recipient of the 2026 Outstanding Sociology Senior Award, and Kate Burns, recipient of the 2026 Outstanding Anthropology Senior Award. These awards recognize distinguished scholarship and ethical research practices by senior majors.

Shipp was recognized for her mixed-methods research on the impact of the presentation of “bad behavior” in children’s literature on neurodivergent children from the 1980s until the present.

Kate Burns was recognized for her archaeological research and ceramic analysis at the Dos Hombres field site in Belize, research that she will continue to pursue in the Ph.D program in Anthropology at UT-Austin.

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Mallory Otten 鈥26 and Rena Zito present research at the American Society of Criminology conference /u/news/2025/12/01/malloy-otten-26-and-rena-zito-present-research-at-the-american-society-of-criminology-conference/ Mon, 01 Dec 2025 16:26:31 +0000 /u/news/?p=1034263 Lumen scholar and public health major Mallory Otten 鈥26 and her faculty mentor, Associate Professor of Sociology Rena Zito, presented their research, 鈥淏eauty and Blame: How Gender and Attractiveness Shape Perceptions of Intimate Partner Violence Perpetrators,鈥 at the annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology on Nov. 12 in Washington, DC. Their talk was included in the session 鈥淣ew Research: Understanding the Role of Gender and Victimization.鈥

Otten and Zito鈥檚 project uses a survey-based experiment to explore how a perpetrator鈥檚 gender and physical appearance shape the way people interpret heterosexual intimate partner violence (IPV). Using original data from a nationally representative sample of 935 U.S. adults, they examined how respondents assessed culpability, the harm experienced by victims, deserved punishment, offense severity and the extent to which violent behavior was viewed as 鈥渘ormal鈥 within relationships.

Their findings show that perpetrator gender influenced judgments across all of these areas. They also found evidence of an 鈥渁ttractiveness premium,鈥 in which physically attractive perpetrators were viewed as more justified in their actions or as engaging in behavior that was less troubling, but only when female. Drawing on a feminist criminological perspective, Otten and Zito suggest that cultural norms surrounding gender and violence can lead observers to minimize violence committed by women who fit conventional standards of femininity.

These patterns help explain why some male victims of female-perpetrated IPV struggle to identify their experiences as abuse and often hesitate to seek support. This research is part of Otten’s larger, ongoing research program on perceptions of IPV, supported by the Lumen Prize.

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Rena Zito, Stacy De Coster and Eden Ralph 鈥23 publish study on attitudes towards college applicants with felony records /u/news/2025/11/17/rena-zito-stacy-de-coster-and-eden-ralph-23-publish-study-on-attitudes-towards-college-applicants-with-felony-records/ Mon, 17 Nov 2025 14:11:10 +0000 /u/news/?p=1033482
Associate Professor of Sociology Rena Zito

A recent study led by Associate Professor of Sociology Rena Zito, along with Stacy De Coster from North Carolina State University and Eden Ralph ’23, sheds light on how college students feel about admitting applicants with felony records and histories of incarceration. The article, titled “,” was published in “Sociological Focus.”

Using a survey-based experiment, the study examines how factors like race and the type of offense affect college students’ willingness to accept or reject applicants with criminal backgrounds. The research involved students from two universities (one public and one private) who were asked to respond to a vignette about a fictional college applicant with a felony record.

The findings reveal some important patterns:

  • Students are more likely to support restrictive admissions policies for applicants with violent criminal records than for those with drug-related offenses, regardless of the applicant’s race.
  • Political views, concerns about campus safety, and general skepticism about the justice system played a major role in shaping students鈥 opinions.
  • Qualitative responses (open-ended answers) showed that students often wrestle with a tension between supporting second chances and prioritizing safety and fairness in admissions.
  • Race shapes deliberations of admissions for applicants with drug records but not for those with violent records.

Overall, student support for the restrictive inclusion of students with violent and drug felony records mirrors broader public opinion on criminal justice policy reform, potentially hindering the full restoration of rights and opportunities, particularly among those deemed unworthy.

Eden Ralph ’23, who contributed to the research, went on to earn an M.S. in Criminology in2024 and is now working toward a Ph.D in Criminology, both at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Rena Zito interviewed for 鈥楪illes is in the Air鈥 podcast /u/news/2025/08/25/rena-zito-interviewed-for-gilles-is-in-the-air-podcast/ Mon, 25 Aug 2025 19:37:05 +0000 /u/news/?p=1025699 Sociologist Rena Zito was featured on the “Gilles is in the Air” podcast, put out by the European Society for the Study of Tourette Syndrome (ESSTS). The interview centered on Zito’s recent study on the impacts of the “swearing disease” stereotype on people with Tourette Syndrome, published in the journal “Deviant Behavior.”

The episode digs into the details of the study: Its goals, its most striking findings and how its results provide insight into how individuals with the condition, advocacy organizations, and health care professionals can educate about Tourette Syndrome without perpetuating the stigma of coprolalia (obscene language tics).

The full episode is available on聽, the , or the聽.

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Rena Zito publishes research on Tourette鈥檚 related stigma and stereotypes /u/news/2025/08/12/rena-zito-publishes-research-on-tourettes-related-stigma-and-stereotypes/ Tue, 12 Aug 2025 20:19:48 +0000 /u/news/?p=1024132 How does the “swearing disease” stereotype affect people with Tourette Syndrome? And how do efforts to counter the stereotype impact those who have coprolalia (obscene language tics)?

Zito’s , published in the journal “Deviant Behavior,” explores how this narrow stereotype circulates in media and everyday interactions, and how adults with Tourette Syndrom (TS) push back against it, sometimes with unintended consequences for those whose tics confirm the stereotype.

Drawing on interviews with 30 adults diagnosed with TS, Zito found that widespread misconceptions about TS fuel social stigma, delay diagnosis and push people without obscene-language tics to distance themselves from the condition鈥檚 more sensationalized image. Many do so by stressing that coprolalia is rare and presenting themselves as examples of 鈥渘ormal鈥 TS. But this distancing perpetuates a tic hierarchy in which tics are stratified by how socially acceptable they are, both in the public eye and within the TS community itself. As a result, people with coprolalia often experience even well-intentioned stereotype-busting as marginalizing.

Zito concludes that correcting myths about TS is vital, but it shouldn鈥檛 come at the expense of people with coprolalia. Advocacy groups, individuals with TS, and medical professionals can foster inclusion by acknowledging the full range of TS experiences and framing coprolalia聽as one of many possible tic expressions rather than treating it as an unfortunate exception.

This research was supported by an 51爆料网 Summer Research Fellowship.

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Three students present research at the Southern Sociological Society conference /u/news/2025/04/22/three-students-present-research-at-the-southern-sociological-society-conference/ Tue, 22 Apr 2025 15:45:39 +0000 /u/news/?p=1013353 Three 51爆料网 students presented research at the annual Southern Sociological Society Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, from April 9 through April 12.

Mason Carter 鈥25, a sociology major, presented 鈥淩acial Conceptualization and Classification: Understanding in Color鈥 in a session on Racial Appraisals, Conceptualization, and Attitudes. The presentation drew on survey data in which respondents were asked their race in an open-ended question and then asked to explain their answer鈥攖hat is, respondents shared the grounds for how they define their racial identity. The presentation examined variation by factors like education, race, and gender in how Americans think about the basis of race. Raj Ghoshal, associate professor of sociology, mentored Mason’s research.

Sol Addison ’25, a sociology and applied math double major, presented a cross-cultural study on how individuals use brands to express their authentic selves, comparing people in the U.S. and China. Using survey data from nationally representative samples, the research explored how cultural orientations鈥攕pecifically individualism and collectivism鈥攕hape brand-related identity expression. Surprisingly, Chinese respondents reported higher levels of individualism than expected, and both orientations positively predicted brand authentication. Chinese participants were also more likely than Americans to use brands to reflect both personal and social identities. By introducing the concept of “brand authentication,” Sol’s work highlights how global brands can act as cultural connectors, shaping identity and community across borders. Alexis Franzese and Rena Zito, associate professors of sociology, mentored Sol’s research.

Trinity Barnett ’25, a psychology and media Analytics double major, gave a presentation that explored the intersection of gender, labor and leisure by examining who takes on the work of planning family vacations to Walt Disney World. Drawing on survey data from over 200 respondents recruited through Disney trip planning forums, the study found that women鈥攚ho made up the vast majority of respondents鈥攚ere significantly more likely than men to experience trip planning as laborious. The findings reveal that while trip planning can serve as both a source of stress and satisfaction, it also highlights the often invisible labor that women disproportionately shoulder, even in contexts meant for relaxation and enjoyment. Alexis Franzese, associate professor of sociology, co-authored and mentored Trinity’s research.

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Elon sociology professors present at the 2025 Southern Sociological Society conference /u/news/2025/04/21/elon-sociology-professors-present-at-the-2025-southern-sociological-society-conference/ Mon, 21 Apr 2025 20:24:58 +0000 /u/news/?p=1013339 Three faculty members in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology presented research at the annual Southern Sociological Society Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, from April 9 through April 12.

Rena Zeto

Rena Zito, associate professor of sociology, presented “When You’re (Not) the Stereotype: Coprolalia Stigma in the Lives of People with Tourette Syndrome.” Zito鈥檚 presentation described the results of a qualitative study of 30 adults with Tourette Syndrome, including those with and without the experience of swearing tics, called coprolalia. The study demonstrated how many people with Tourette Syndrome experience frustration with others’ misperceptions of their condition, which they feel pressure to correct through revealing strategies of acknowledgement, education, and selective normalization. These efforts inadvertently position those who experience the most stigmatized aspects of Tourette Syndrome as the undesirable other and聽function as “ideological repair work” by legitimizing the condition within socially acceptable boundaries.

Raj Ghoshal, associate professor of sociology
Raj Ghoshal

Raj聽Ghoshal, associate professor of sociology, organized two sessions on racial appraisals, conceptualization and attitudes. He presented 鈥淲ho is Black? Black Americans鈥 Appraisals鈥 in the first of these sessions. The presentation drew on survey data to examine how Black Americans think about Black identity and to map links between open-ended racial identity, closed-ended racial self-classification, and self-identification as multiracial or not. In another session, Ghoshal also presented 鈥淭eaching about Colorblindness and Equity,鈥 which addressed varied meanings of these terms in changing cultural contexts.

Kerem Morgu虉l

Kerem Morg眉l, assistant professor of sociology, presented his latest research on how native-born citizens in Turkey evaluate different types of Syrian refugees. In his presentation, Morg眉l drew on data from two original vignette experiments embedded in a representative survey of over 2,200 adult residents in Istanbul. His findings challenge assumptions based on prior studies conducted in Europe and the United States, which suggest that citizens tend to favor refugees who are highly skilled, culturally proximate, or particularly vulnerable. In contrast, Morg眉l found that Turkish citizens exhibit relatively little differentiation among individual refugee profiles. Instead, their attitudes appear to be driven primarily by generalized perceptions of Syrian refugees as a group.

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Rena Zito presents research on Tourette Syndrome, stigma and online discourse /u/news/2025/03/10/rena-zito-presents-research-on-tourette-syndrome-stigma-and-online-discourse/ Mon, 10 Mar 2025 20:55:46 +0000 /u/news/?p=1009381 Rena Zito, associate professor of sociology, presented her research at the Eastern Sociological Society annual conference in Boston, Massachusetts, on March 7, 2025. Her talk, “‘Good Tourette鈥檚’ and ‘Bad Tourette鈥檚:’ Coprolalia, Stereotypes, and Resisting Marginalization in an Online Discussion Forum,” was part of a session focused on chronic health conditions and technology.

Zito鈥檚 research applies sociologist Erving Goffman鈥檚 theories on identity and stigma management to explore how people with Tourette Syndrome (TS) navigate the widespread stereotype of TS as 鈥渢he swearing disease.鈥 Specifically, she examines how individuals with TS work to distance themselves and their condition from this stigma, as well as the unintended consequences for those who experience coprolalia, the involuntary use of obscene or socially inappropriate language.

The presented research addressed two central questions: (1) How do people with Tourette Syndrome respond to the 鈥渟wearing disease鈥 stereotype? and (2) What are the consequences of that response for people with coprolalia?

The research included a thematic content analysis of qualitative data sourced from the subreddit r/Tourettes using the Python Reddit application programming interface wrapper (PRAW 7.7.1). Zito found that people with Tourette Syndrome construct the 鈥渙ther鈥 by using statistical folk facts to minimize coprolalia鈥檚 prevalence and by engaging in rhetorical distancing and relabeling. In turn, people with coprolalia perceive that distancing is motivated by courtesy stigma: Coprolalia must be minimized and those with it othered because their very existence is the source of Tourette鈥檚 stigma. Even well-intentioned attempts to counter courtesy stigma inadvertently legitimize the idea that those whose tics are profane or socially inappropriate 鈥 group that already experiences heightened social rejection 鈥 constitute the undesirable 鈥渙ther.鈥

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