KU dating study latest excuse for egregious stock-photo usage on Internet

The fall semester has barely started, and already science is back with a don’t-send-me-to-the-blackboard boner. Two University of Kansas researchers have just published survey results claiming that sexist men and sexist women are having plenty of sexist sex. Hot!
Jeffrey Hall, an associate professor at KU, and Melanie Canterberry, a social psychology student at the school, report that “assertive courtship strategies are a form of mutual identification of similarly sexist attitudes shared between courtship partners. Women who adopt sexist attitudes are more likely to prefer men who adopt similar attitudes. Not only do sexist men and women prefer partners who are like them, they prefer courtship strategies where men are the aggressors and women are the gatekeepers.”
In English, this means two things.
