| Literature DB >> 27921269 |
Ava D Horowitz1, Edward Bedford2.
Abstract
Definitions of sexual behavior display a robust hierarchy of agreement regarding whether or not acts should be classed as, for example, sex or virginity loss. The current research offers a theoretical explanation for this hierarchy, proposing that sexual definitions display graded categorical structure, arising from goodness of membership judgments. Moderation of this graded structure is also predicted, with the focus here on how sexual orientation identity affects sexual definitions. A total of 300 18- to 30-year-old participants completed an online survey, rating 18 behaviors for how far each constitutes having "had sex" and virginity loss. Participants fell into one of four groups: heterosexual male or female, gay male or lesbian. The predicted ratings hierarchy emerged, in which bidirectional genital acts were rated significantly higher than unidirectional or nonpenetrative contact, which was in turn rated significantly higher than acts involving no genital contact. Moderation of graded structure was also in line with predictions. Compared to the other groups, the lesbian group significantly upgraded ratings of genital contact that was either unidirectional or nonpenetrative. There was also evidence of upgrading by the gay male sample of anal intercourse ratings. These effects are theorized to reflect group-level variation in experience, contextual perspective, and identity-management. The implications of the findings in relation to previous research are discussed. It is suggested that a graded structure approach can greatly benefit future research into sexual definitions, by permitting variable definitions to be predicted and explained, rather than merely identified.Entities:
Keywords: Definitions of sex; Definitions of virginity loss; Graded structure; Sexual behavior; Sexual orientation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27921269 PMCID: PMC5529489 DOI: 10.1007/s10508-016-0905-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Sex Behav ISSN: 0004-0002
Principal components analysis of ratings for definitions of having “had sex”
| Sexual behavior | Factor 1: Unidirectional/nonpenetrative contact | Factor 2: Nongenital contact | Factor 3: Other intercourse | Factor 4: Vaginal intercourse |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiative oral-genital contact |
| |||
| Receptive oral-genital contact |
| |||
| Receptive sex aid contact |
| |||
| Initiative sex aid contact |
| |||
| Initiative manual-genital contact |
| |||
| Receptive manual-genital contact |
| .41 | ||
| Nonpenetrative genital-to-genital contact |
| |||
| Simultaneous masturbation in another’s presence | .59 |
| ||
| Initiative manual contact with breasts/nipples |
| |||
| Receptive manual contact with breasts/nipples |
| |||
| Initiative oral contact with breasts/nipples |
| |||
| Receptive oral contact with breasts/nipples |
| |||
| Deep kissing |
| |||
| Simultaneous masturbation via phone contact | .42 |
| .41 | |
| Simultaneous masturbation via computer contact |
| .53 | ||
| Anal intercourse |
| |||
| Brief/partial intercourse |
| |||
| Vaginal intercourse |
| |||
| Eigenvalues | 8.80 | 2.09 | 1.25 | 1.08 |
| Percentage of variance | 48.89 | 11.63 | 6.94 | 5.98 |
| Cronbach’s alphaa | .94 | .92 | .38 | – |
Factor loadings <.40 are suppressed. In boldface are factor loadings incorporated into the factor
aCronbach’s alphas for incorporated items
Principal components analysis of ratings for definitions of virginity loss
| Sexual behavior | Factor 1: Nongenital contact | Factor 2: Unidirectional/nonpenetrative genital contact | Factor 3: Intercourse |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initiative manual contact with breasts/nipples |
| ||
| Receptive manual contact with breasts/nipples |
| ||
| Initiative oral contact with breasts/nipples |
| ||
| Simultaneous masturbation via computer contact |
| ||
| Receptive oral contact with breasts/nipples |
| ||
| Deep kissing |
| ||
| Simultaneous masturbation via phone contact |
| ||
| Simultaneous masturbation in another’s presence |
| .50 | |
| Initiative oral-genital contact |
| ||
| Receptive oral-genital contact |
| ||
| Initiative sex aid contact |
| ||
| Receptive sex aid contact |
| ||
| Receptive manual-genital contact |
| ||
| Initiative manual-genital contact | .42 |
| |
| Nonpenetrative genital-to-genital contact |
| ||
| Brief/partial intercourse |
| ||
| Anal intercourse |
| ||
| Vaginal intercourse |
| ||
| Eigenvalues | 9.02 | 2.38 | 1.13 |
| Percentage of variance | 50.11 | 13.25 | 6.27 |
| Cronbach’s alphaa | .94 | .93 | .26 |
Factor loadings <.40 are suppressed. In boldface are factor loadings incorporated into the factor
aCronbach’s alphas for incorporated items
Composite scores analysis for definitions of sex and virginity loss as a function of act type: means, SDs, and test statistics within each sexual orientation identity group and in total
| Definition and group | Means and SDs by act type | Within-subject effects | Within-subject linear contrasts | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercourse | Unidirectional/nonpenetrative genital contact | Nongenital contact | |||
|
| |||||
| Lesbian | 5.41ab (.73) | 4.73ac (.92) | 1.88bc (.75) |
|
|
| Gay male | 5.67ab (.46) | 3.63ac (1.10) | 1.67bc (.59) |
|
|
| Heterosexual female | 5.68ab (.45) | 3.23ac (1.41) | 1.78bc (1.02) |
|
|
| Heterosexual male | 5.54ab (.64) | 2.86ac (1.54) | 1.63bc (.94) |
|
|
| Total | 5.61ab (.55) | 3.46ac (1.44) | 1.75bc (.90) |
|
|
|
| |||||
| Lesbian | 5.39ab (.80) | 4.17ac (1.14) | 1.44bc (.65) |
|
|
| Gay male | 5.31ab (1.04) | 2.36ac (1.24) | 1.22bc (.38) |
|
|
| Heterosexual female | 5.36ab (.74) | 2.04ac (1.22) | 1.34bc (.73) |
|
|
| Heterosexual male | 5.04ab (.90) | 1.80ac (1.29) | 1.29bc (.76) |
|
|
| Total | 5.29ab (.84) | 2.35ac (1.44) | 1.33bc (.68) |
|
|
For each row titled “Lesbian,” “Gay male,” “Heterosexual female,” and “Heterosexual male,” the test statistics are from the simple effects analyses examining ratings differences as a function of act type within each sexual orientation identity group. For each row titled “total,” the test statistics are the main effects of act type (i.e., across all groups) from the omnibus ANOVA
abc Within each row, means with the same letter were significantly different to a Bonferroni-corrected p < .0017
Intercourse behaviors analysis for definitions of sex and virginity loss as a function of act type: means, SDs, and test statistics within each sexual orientation identity group and in total
| Definition and group | Means and SDs by act type | Within-subject effects | Within-subject linear contrasts | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaginal Intercourse | Anal Intercourse | Brief/partial intercourse | |||
|
| |||||
| Lesbian | 5.95a (.31) | 5.48 (1.25) | 4.83a (1.32) |
|
|
| Gay male | 5.87a (.73) | 6.00b (.00) | 5.17ab (.98) |
|
|
| Heterosexual female | 5.998a (.15) | 5.70b (.80) | 5.30ab (1.01) |
|
|
| Heterosexual male | 5.93a (.40) | 5.62b (1.02) | 5.00ab (1.30) |
|
|
| Total | 5.95ab (.38) | 5.70ac (.87) | 5.15bc (1.13) |
|
|
|
| |||||
| Lesbian | 6.00ab (.00) | 5.07a (1.73) | 4.90b (1.46) |
|
|
| Gay male | 5.56 (1.35) | 5.82a (.82) | 4.64a (1.77) |
|
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| Heterosexual female | 5.85ab (.81) | 4.92a (1.57) | 5.29b (1.08) |
|
|
| Heterosexual male | 5.89ab (.68) | 4.77a (1.74) | 4.55b (1.77) |
|
|
| Total | 5.84ab (.83) | 5.04a (1.58) | 4.98b (1.44) |
|
|
For each row titled “Lesbian,” “Gay male,” “Heterosexual female,” and “Heterosexual male,” the test statistics are from the simple effects analyses examining ratings differences as a function of act type within each sexual orientation identity group. For each row titled “total,” the test statistics are the main effects of act type (i.e., across all groups) from the omnibus ANOVA
abc Within each row, means with the same letter were significantly different to a Bonferroni-corrected p < .0017
Mean ratings and SDs for definitions of having “had sex” and virginity loss
| Sex ( | Virginity loss ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sexual behavior |
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||
| Vaginal intercourse | 5.94 | .42 | 5.84 | .82 |
| Anal intercourse | 5.68 | .91 | 5.06 | 1.57 |
| Brief/partial intercourse | 5.16 | 1.12 | 4.97 | 1.46 |
|
| ||||
| Receptive sex aid contact | 3.87 | 1.70 | 2.92 | 1.92 |
| Initiative oral-genital contact | 3.87 | 1.74 | 2.34 | 1.78 |
| Initiative sex aid contact | 3.84 | 1.73 | 2.67 | 1.91 |
| Receptive oral-genital contact | 3.81 | 1.77 | 2.52 | 1.86 |
| Nonpenetrative genital-to-genital contact | 3.18 | 1.65 | 2.24 | 1.64 |
| Initiative manual-genital contact | 2.96 | 1.57 | 1.85 | 1.38 |
| Receptive manual-genital contact | 2.90 | 1.56 | 1.91 | 1.43 |
|
| ||||
| Simultaneous masturbation in another’s presence | 2.39 | 1.45 | 1.63 | 1.15 |
| Simultaneous masturbation via phone contact | 1.87 | 1.21 | 1.33 | .88 |
| Simultaneous masturbation via computer contact | 1.81 | 1.19 | 1.34 | .85 |
| Initiative oral contact with breasts/nipples | 1.78 | 1.19 | 1.35 | .86 |
| Initiative manual contact with breasts/nipples | 1.73 | 1.13 | 1.32 | .80 |
| Receptive manual contact with breasts/nipples | 1.69 | 1.07 | 1.33 | .80 |
| Receptive oral contact with breasts/nipples | 1.69 | 1.10 | 1.25 | .72 |
| Deep kissing | 1.21 | .67 | 1.12 | .58 |
Absolute range for ratings of both sex and virginity loss was 1–6