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In this study 120 male and female subjects made judgments about a hypothetical roommate of the same gender whose father is described as being marked by one of five possible problems. For a sixth group, intended as a control, the father was described as having a job that took him away from home 2 weeks of every month. Using a Likert-type scale, the functioning of the hypothetical roommate was judged in four areas of life: school, friends, career, and family. The results indicate that school and family were the two areas of life judged to be most affected by the father's problem. People who have a depressed, alcoholic, or incarcerated father were perceived as having more difficulty than those who have a father who is old, frequently absent, or who has only one leg, with the area of life most affected differing as a function of the father's problem. These findings support the associative stigma construct and suggest that stigma may be passed on from stigmatized people to members of their social network.
Mehta et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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