Indiana University Sexual Diversity Study
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Debby Herbenick, Indiana University; Brian Dodge, Indiana University; Tsung-Chieh (Jane) Fu, Indiana University
Version: View help for Version V5
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application/x-stata | 377.1 KB | 05/20/2020 12:49:PM |
Project Citation:
Herbenick, Debby, Dodge, Brian, and Fu, Tsung-Chieh (Jane). Indiana University Sexual Diversity Study. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2020-05-21. https://doi.org/10.3886/E100426V5
Project Description
Summary:
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In 2015, we conducted a cross-sectional, Internet-based U.S. nationally
representative probability survey of 2,021 adults (975 men, 1,046 women)
focused on a broad range of sexual behaviors. Participants reported on
demographic items, lifetime and recent sexual behaviors, and the appeal of 50+ sexual
behaviors. Most (>80%) reported lifetime masturbation, vaginal sex, and oral
sex. Lifetime anal sex was reported by 43% of men (insertive) and 37% of women
(receptive). Common lifetime sexual behaviors included wearing sexy
lingerie/underwear (75% women, 26% men), sending/receiving digital nude/semi-nude
photos (54% women, 65% men), reading
erotic stories (57% of participants), public sex (≥43%), role-playing (≥22%), tying/being
tied up (≥20%), spanking (≥30%), and watching sexually explicit videos/DVDs (60%
women, 82% men). Threesomes (10% women, 18% men) and playful whipping (≥13%) were
less common. Lifetime group sex, sex parties, taking a sexuality class/workshop,
and going to BDSM parties were uncommon (<8%). More Americans identified behaviors
as “appealing” than had engaged in them. Romantic/affectionate behaviors were
among those most commonly identified as appealing for both men and women. With
the exception of anal sex, the appeal of particular behaviors was associated
with greater odds that the individual had ever engaged in the behavior.
Funding Sources:
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No. 9 Ventures LLC
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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sexual behavior;
sexual diversity
Geographic Coverage:
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United States
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