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Biases in internet sexual health samples: Comparison of an internet sexuality survey and a national sexual health survey in Sweden

Social Science & Medicine, 2005
The internet is becoming a favored technology for carrying out survey research, and particularly sexual health research. However, its utility is limited by unresolved sampling questions such as how biased internet samples may be. This paper addresses this issue through comparison of a 'gold standard' random selection population-based sexual survey (The
Michael W, Ross   +4 more
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Internet pornography: A social psychological perspective on internet sexuality

Journal of Sex Research, 2001
Spectacular growth in availability of sexually explicit material on the Internet challenges sexual science to study antecedents and consequences of experience with such content.
William A. Fisher, Azy Barak
openaire   +3 more sources

The Complexity of Internet Sexuality

2011
Research has shown men and women of all ages and sexual orientations to use the Internet for sexual purposes. For example, the Internet is used to access pornography, to find sex-related information, to purchase sexual merchandise, and to find partners for romance and sex.
Kristian, Daneback, Michael W, Ross
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Internet offending: Sexual and non-sexual functions within a Dutch sample

Journal of Sexual Aggression, 2010
The current study found support for the existence of the functions of internet offending in a Dutch sample, as found previously in qualitative research. According to 43 internet offenders who completed the Internet Offender-Function Questionnaire (IO-FQ), the avoidant function was most salient for this internet offender group. Furthermore, based on the
Surjadi, B.   +3 more
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Psychological Profiles of Internet Sexual Offenders

Sexual Abuse, 2009
A sample of 505 Internet sex offenders and 526 contact sex offenders were compared on a range of psychological measures relating to offense-supportive beliefs, empathic concern, interpersonal functioning, and emotional management. Internet offenders could be successfully discriminated from contact offenders on 7 out of 15 measures.
Ian Alexander, Elliott   +3 more
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Internet Sexuality

2012
“Internet sexuality” is an umbrella term that refers to all sex-related content and activities observable on the internet. Six main categories of internet sexuality can be identified: (1) sexually explicit material (erotica and pornography), (2) sex education, (3) sexual contacts, (4) sexual subcultures, (5) sex shops, and (6) sex work.
openaire   +1 more source

Internet Sexual Offending

2017
Sex offenders surely must be at the top of the list of our most destructive criminal populations. Within society they attempt to worm their way into our healthiest institutions—youth-serving organizations, churches and temples, schools, and youth athletics, to name but a few settings—for the sole purpose of committing acts of harm against children ...
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Internet Sexual Offender Laws

2016
While Internet sexual offenses represent only about ten percent of all sex offenses in the U.S., arrests and prosecutions for Internet sex offenders, both child pornography and solicitation offenses, are increasing and may continue to grow as technological advances increase the speed and anonymity of trading illegal pornography online.
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Sexual Information and Internet Resources

The Family Journal, 2002
Internet Web pages providing sexual information are prolific. Finding factual, relevant sexual information responsibly written can be an arduous task for the public and counselors. This article contains an annotated “webliography” containing Internet addresses and descriptions of pertinent Internet sexuality resources for the general public ...
Vaughn S. Millner, Jerry D. Kiser
openaire   +1 more source

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