“…In the literature, researchers commonly use two different measurement methods: the self-labelling method, which allows the respondent to define whether they feel harassed, and the behavioural method, which provides the respondent with a list of experiences defined by the researcher as harassing. The self-labelling approach, used by Blindow et al ,5 is common within the sociopsychological tradition, which emphasises that subjective experience is important in predicting victim responses and health outcomes. However, because people’s perceptions of what constitutes different types of harassment are likely to vary between men and women,1 in cultural contexts and change over time,9 the self-labelling approach can introduce bias 2.…”