澳门六合彩历史记录

Think Millennials Are the 鈥楬ookup Generation?鈥

You鈥檙e wrong, according to a new sex study that really contradicts the widespread notion that Millennials are the 鈥渉ookup鈥 generation, which is popularized by dating apps like 鈥淭inder鈥 and others.


By gisele galoustian | 8/2/2016

Young American adults aren鈥檛 doing it as often as you鈥檇 think. Although Americans are now strikingly more accepting of premarital sex, a new study reveals that more Millennials, born in the 1990s in particular, are nevertheless forgoing sex during young adulthood. The new sexual revolution has apparently left behind a larger segment of this generation than first thought.

鈥淭his study really contradicts the widespread notion that Millennials are the 鈥榟ookup鈥 generation, which is popularized by dating apps like 鈥楾inder鈥 and others, suggesting that they are just looking for quick relationships and frequent casual sex,鈥 said Ryne Sherman, Ph.D., co-author of the study and associate professor of psychology in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science at 澳门六合彩历史记录. 鈥淥ur data show that this doesn鈥檛 seem to be the case at all and that Millennials are not more promiscuous than their predecessors.鈥

A key finding from the study conducted by Sherman and co-authors Jean Twenge, Ph.D., San Diego State University, and Brooke E. Wells, Ph.D., Widener University, is that the changes in sexual inactivity in Millennials was not related to the time period or decade, but rather to the generation.

鈥淭his is really about this generation of young American adults and not the time period in which they are living,鈥 said Sherman. 鈥淭his has very little to do with changing norms about sexual behavior; the generations are just different and it has everything to do with them.鈥

To determine if this shift was due to differences in age or generation, the researchers used a two-pronged approach to compare sexual inactivity rates by birth decade among 20 to 24 year olds. They聽 conducted a unique age-period-cohort analysis using the entire sample of adults ages 18 to 96 in the General Social Survey (GSS), a nationally representative sample of American adults since 1989. They also examined gender, race, education, region, and religiosity as moderators to determine whether any changes in sexual inactivity differed from one group to another.

Among Americans aged 20 to 24, Millennials born in the early 1990s were significantly more likely to report no sexual partners after age 18 than GenX鈥檈rs born in the late 1960s. Fifteen percent of the 20- to 24-year-old Americans born in the 1990s had no sexual partners since turning 18, compared to 6 percent of those born in the 1960s. The only other generation that showed a higher rate of sexual inactivity were those born in the 1920s. 聽

The increase in adult sexual inactivity between the 1960s and the 1990s generations was larger and significant among women (from 2.3 percent to 5.4 percent), but not among men (from 1.7 percent to 1.9 percent). It was non-existent among Black Americans (2.6 percent to 2.6 percent, compared to a significant jump from 1.6 percent to 3.9 percent among Whites).

鈥淢any of the differences between the groups in the recent generations were also significant,鈥 said Sherman. 鈥淔or example, women were more likely to be sexually inactive compared to men, Whites more than Blacks, those who did not attend college more than those who did, and in the East more than the West.鈥

Americans born in the 1990s were the most likely to be sexually inactive in their early 20s, and showed a definite break with those born in the 1980s. Other findings from the study indicate that those born in the 1990s are growing up more slowly than those born in the 1980s. For example, fewer get a driver鈥檚 license or work for pay, also showing a generational break at some point in the 1990s.

The researchers speculate that there may be a number of reasons for this major shift between Millennials and other generations including more sex education and awareness of sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV, easy access to pornography because of technology, or perhaps even differences in defining what sexual activity is and is not (e.g. oral sex vs. intercourse) since generations define sex differently.

鈥淲hile attitudes about premarital sex have become more permissive over time, rise in individualism allows young American adults to have permissive attitudes without feeling the pressure to conform in their own behavior,鈥 said Sherman.

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