“…It may indeed be right to say that by building in a necessary assumption of victimization in situations involving, say, sex that is not positively desired for its own sake, involving an actively pursuing and possibly forceful male and a passive woman, or a woman engaged in sex whilst intoxicated, we will catch more men who have committed rape and sexual assault. It is also true that women may themselves be unwilling or unable to acknowledge that they have been victimized by coercive or manipulative male strategies (Peterson & Muehlenhard, 2007;Littleton, 2011;Coy, Thiara, & Kelly, 2011;Turchik, Probst, Irvin, Chau, & Gidyez, 2010;Krahé, Bieneck, & ScheinbergerOlwig, 2007;Busby, 2012;Gotell, 2012). However, there is a danger that building such assumptions into our thinking also implicitly relies on the same principle that makes rape myth acceptance so odious: in judging a particular incident, we rely not on information as to what actually happened but on a generalized set of beliefs as to what usually happens.…”