Hypermasculinity is a psychological and sociological term for the exaggeration of male stereotypical behavior, such as an emphasis on physical strength, aggression, and human male sexuality. In the field of clinical psychology, this term has been used ever since the publication of research by Donald L. Mosher and Mark Sirkin in 1984. Mosher and Sirkin operationally define hypermasculinity or the "macho personality" as consisting of three variables: Callous sexual attitudes toward women The belief that violence is manly The experience of danger as exciting They developed the Hypermasculinity In
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).