“…Furthermore, it appears that bystanders are more willing to intervene in those cases where they consider the potential victim to be a member of their own social group, or where they know the victim and/or perpetrator (Bennett, Banyard, & Edwards, 2015; Katz, Pazienza, Olin, & Rich, 2014; Palmer, Nicksa, & McMahon, 2016), while men who do intervene sometimes have been found to encourage the perpetrator of the aggression (Graham et al, 2014). Some other moderators of bystander willingness to intervene include gender (see, e.g., Amar, Sutherland, & Laughon, 2014), victimization/perpetration history and history of misogyny (DeMaria et al, 2018), history of pornography use (Foubert & Bridges, 2017), and victim/perpetrator intoxication, as bystanders who witness conflict between intoxicated individuals are more likely to intervene than are those who witness conflict between sober individuals (Parks, Osgood, Felson, Wells, & Graham, 2013).…”