Abstract
Past studies indicate that men generally report having had more sexual experience and sexual partners than women, as well as an earlier age at first intercourse. At least some of these findings may partially reflect different responses to certain contextual variables in research. College students (266 men and 463 women) were asked to anonymously report their sexual attitudes and behavior after reading one of three fictitious statements about research findings regarding gender differences in sexuality. Some past findings were replicated, with men reporting somewhat more sexual experience and more permissive sexual attitudes than women. However, women reported a significantly younger age at first intercourse than did men. While there was no significant sex difference for total number of sexual partners, there was a significant interaction. With female research assistants (but not with male assistants), men reported more sexual partners when they were told that women are now more sexually permissive than men. This finding appeared to be largely a function of the men who scored higher on measures of hypermasculinity and ambivalent sexism. Women's reports were not significantly affected by the wording of the cover sheet, regardless of the sex of the research assistant. Even in this anonymous survey, the sex of the experimenter and the nature of the statement about research findings had an impact on the sex differences that were found. In light of these results, some previous conclusions about male-female differences in sexual behavior may need to be examined more closely.
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Notes
The one exception has been in the area of reports of number of sexual partners where it is apparent that the partner counts provided by heterosexual men and women should be comparable (McConaghy, 1999). Various explanations have been posed to account for the mismatch in reported partners, including dishonesty, inaccurate recall, the exclusion of prostitutes from the data sample, sex differences in the methods used to determine the number of partners, potential sampling bias, and possible response bias (Wiederman, 1997).
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Acknowledgements
Special thanks to Joey Billotte, Nathan Mollette, Tasha Stumpf, Vicki Summers, and Carla Wilkinson, who served as research assistants for this study. Michele Alexander, Dan Lehman, and Paul Trapnell made helpful suggestions and Jim McNulty provided valuable comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
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Fisher, T.D. Sex of Experimenter and Social Norm Effects on Reports of Sexual Behavior in Young Men and Women. Arch Sex Behav 36, 89–100 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-006-9094-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-006-9094-7