| Literature DB >> 35194368 |
Billie E McKeen1, Ryan C Anderson1, David A Mitchell1.
Abstract
Casual sex, also referred to as a hookup, has been associated with a range of negative emotional outcomes for women, including regret, anxiety, depression and social stigma. However, it has been argued that it is the nature of the sexual motivation, not gender that influences the emotional outcome. This study was designed to ascertain what motivates people to have casual sex, what emotional outcomes follow casual sex and whether there are gender differences among these variables. Seven hundred and one participants (47% men and 52.8% women) completed a 44-item online survey. Gender differences were found for both sexual motivations and emotional outcomes of casual sex, with women generally having more negative emotional outcomes than men. Additionally, a principal components analysis uncovered four reliable principal motivations underlying engagement in casual sex, and three principal emotional outcomes of casual sex. Predictors of negative emotional outcomes included being motivated to regulate negative emotions and to achieve positive emotions. No predictors (apart from being a man) were found for a positive emotional outcome. While the stigma surrounding female sexual agency is diminishing, results generally support the presence of a sexual double-standard which encourages male promiscuity but dissuades female sexual autonomy.Entities:
Keywords: Casual sex; Emotional outcomes; Gender differences; Hookup; Sexual motivations
Year: 2022 PMID: 35194368 PMCID: PMC8853360 DOI: 10.1007/s12119-022-09946-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Cult ISSN: 1095-5143
M (SD) scores separated by gender for each motivation item
| Motivation (‘I had a hookup…’) | Men | Women |
|---|---|---|
| 4.46 (1.93) | 4.30 (2.03) | |
| 4.17 (1.99) | 3.95 (2.03) | |
| 2.07 (1.39) | 2.15 (1.35) | |
| 3.22 (1.79) | 3.12 (1.83) | |
| 3.03 (1.89) | 2.76 (1.86) | |
| 5.09 (1.84) | 4.52 (2.06) | |
| 3.70 (2.02) | 3.22 (1.87) | |
| 5.79 (1.60) | 4.97 (2.01) | |
| 5.50 (1.69) | 5.36 (1.77) | |
| 4.62 (1.97) | 4.01 (1.99) | |
| 1.62 (.99) | 1.97 (1.25) | |
| 1.68 (1.06) | 2.02 (1.28) | |
| 1.51 (1.04) | 2.06 (1.35) | |
| 1.56 (1.01) | 2.16 (1.38) | |
| 5.49 (1.92) | 5.61 (1.99) | |
| 1.75 (1.13) | 2.45 (1.53) | |
| 3.68 (1.98) | 3.25 (1.89) | |
| 3.46 (1.99) | 3.37 (1.92) | |
| 4.12 (1.97) | 3.79 (2.04) | |
| 6.22 (1.40) | 6.23 (1.35) | |
| 4.41 (2.22) | 3.76 (2.31) | |
| 5.80 (1.69) | 5.88 (1.76) |
Lower scores = higher agreement, *p < .05; **p < .01***p < .001
M (SD) scores separated by gender for each outcome item
| Outcome (‘After the hookup…’) | Men | Women |
|---|---|---|
| 4.88 (1.91) | 4.06 (1.99) | |
| 5.10 (1.81) | 4.32 (1.98) | |
| 5.59 (1.64) | 4.82 (2.05) | |
| 4.87 (1.87) | 4.29 (2.08) | |
| 5.25 (1.83) | 4.51 (2.09) | |
| 2.71 (1.38) | 3.24 (1.71) | |
| 2.88 (1.47) | 3.53 (1.65) | |
| 2.78 (1.57) | 3.28 (1.69) | |
| 2.94 (1.55) | 3.49 (1.63) | |
| 5.13 (1.93) | 4.31 (2.12) | |
| 2.95 (1.38) | 3.45 (1.65) | |
| 3.87 (1.50) | 3.89 (1.59) | |
| 4.03 (1.78) | 4.18 (1.68) |
Lower scores = higher agreement, *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Factor structure for motivations to engage in casual sex (N = 701)
| Factor loadings | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 1. To regulate negative emotions | |||||
| I had a hookup because I felt miserable | .826 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I felt lonely | .792 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I was unhappy | .843 | ||||
| I had a hookup to feel better about myself | .825 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I felt irritable | .562 | ||||
| I had a hookup to increase self-confidence | .771 | ||||
| 2. To achieve positive emotions | |||||
| I had a hookup for physical pleasure | .896 | ||||
| I had a hookup for sexual relief | .865 | ||||
| I had a hookup for fun | .784 | ||||
| I had a hookup for personal enjoyment | .857 | ||||
| I had a hookup for sexual gratification | .781 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I was physically attracted | .546 | ||||
| 3. Unsatisfying current relationship | |||||
| I had a hookup to end my current relationship | .821 | ||||
| I had a hookup because of an argument with partner | .912 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I was in an unsatisfying relationship | .889 | ||||
| 4. Intimacy seeking | |||||
| I had a hookup because I wanted to start a relationship | .778 | ||||
| I had a hookup to build a connection | .867 | ||||
| I had a hookup to feel close to another | .824 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I wanted to feel loved | .717 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I was seeking affection | .692 | ||||
| 5. External influence | |||||
| I had a hookup because I was under the influence of alcohol or other substance | .821 | ||||
| I had a hookup because I felt pressured by others | .758 | ||||
| Eigenvalues | 6.16 | 3.88 | 2.13 | 1.80 | 1.11 |
| Percentage variance | 27.99 | 17.65 | 9.68 | 8.17 | 5.05 |
| Coefficient alpha | .889 | .864 | .853 | .874 | .486 |
Factor loadings < .3 are suppressed
Factor structure for emotional outcomes following casual sex (N = 701)
| Factor loadings | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Item | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| 1. Negative emotional outcome | |||
| After the hookup, I felt lonely | .859 | ||
| After the hookup, I felt unhappy | .915 | ||
| After the hookup, I felt rejected | .817 | ||
| After the hookup, I felt regretful | .878 | ||
| After the hookup, I had negative feelings about myself | .907 | ||
| After the hookup, I was concerned about being negatively judged by others | .686 | ||
| 2. Positive emotional outcome | |||
| After the hookup, I felt sexually satisfied | .846 | ||
| After the hookup, I felt happier | .934 | ||
| After the hookup, I felt more confident about myself | .828 | ||
| After the hookup, I felt content | .884 | ||
| After the hookup, my mood improved | .902 | ||
| 3. Neutral outcome | |||
| After the hookup, I felt the same | − .931 | ||
| After the hookup, my emotions did not change | − .925 | ||
| Eigenvalues | 6.83 | 1.92 | 1.27 |
| Percentage variance | 52.57 | 14.78 | 9.80 |
| Coefficient alpha | .931 | .639 | .842 |
Factor loadings < .3 are suppressed
Fig. 1Independent variables and dependent variables used in multiple regression analysis. The dotted line represents the independent variable which predicts the dependent variable
Multiple regression analysis for sexual motivation predicting negative emotional outcome (n = 276)
| Variable | B [95% CI] | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | .103 [− .001 − .206] | .053 | |
| Regulate negative emotions | .206 [.085 − .326]* | .061 | .212 |
| Achieve positive emotions | − .206 [− .327 − .085]* | .061 | − .195 |
| Unsatisfying relationship | .017 [− .119 − .153] | .069 | .014 |
| Intimacy seeking | .023 [− .101 − .146] | .063 | .023 |
CI confidence interval, B unstandardised regression coefficient, standard error of the coefficient, standardised coefficient, *p = .001.
Multiple regression analysis for sexual motivation predicting neutral emotional outcome (n = 276)
| Variable | B [95% CI] | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | − .175[− .283 − .067] | .055 | |
| Regulate negative emotions | − .085[− .210 − .040] | .064 | − .084 |
| Achieve positive emotions | .294[.168 − .420]* | .064 | .268 |
| Unsatisfying relationship | .059[− .083 − .201] | .048 | .049 |
| Intimacy seeking | .050[− .079 − .179] | .065 | .049 |
CI confidence interval, B unstandardised regression coefficient, = standard error of the coefficient, standardised coefficient, *p < .001.