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Implications of Sex Guilt: A Meta-Analysis
Authors:Tara M Emmers-Sommer  Mike Allen  Kelsea Vadona Schoenbauer  Nancy Burrell
Institution:1. Department of Communication Studies, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USAtara.emmerssommer@unlv.edu;3. Department of Communication, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA;4. Department of Communication Studies, University of Denver, Denver, CO, USA
Abstract:A meta-analysis of the literature examining the outcomes related to feelings of sex guilt was conducted. The analysis demonstrates gendered differences in the experience of sex guilt and myriad attitudinal and behavioral impacts. Specifically, men report lower levels of sex guilt, r?=??.227 than do women and implications of sex guilt experience are vast, including its association with engagement in less sexual activity, r?=??.337, less favorable attitudes toward sex and lessened use of contraceptives, r?=??.276, reduced reports of sexual arousal in response to an explicitly sexual media content, r?=??.308, less positive emotional response to sexually explicit media content, r?=??.367, reduced level of sexual information accuracy, r?=??.324, and less positive attitudes toward sexual behavior, r?=??404. Sex guilt is positively related to level of religiosity/religious behavior, r?=?.439. The findings suggest that sex guilt provides a consistent set of responses to sexual information and media content as well as a motivational basis for behavior. These outcomes are further explicated and discussed.
Keywords:attitudes  gender  meta-analysis  sex guilt
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