吸引力
性吸引
性少数派
身份(音乐)
性认同
自上而下和自下而上的设计
职位(财务)
心理学
社会心理学
性行为
肛交
性取向
性别研究
计算机科学
社会学
和男人发生性关系的男人
人类性学
医学
业务
物理
哲学
软件工程
家庭医学
语言学
声学
梅毒
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)
财务
作者
Drew A. Westmoreland,Samia Sultana,Meredith Ray,Jacob Bleasdale,Kira Argenio,Evan A. Krueger,Christian Grov
标识
DOI:10.1080/00224499.2025.2484832
摘要
Many sexual minority men (SMM) use sex position self-labels, including "top," "bottom," "versatile," as well as combinations like "vers/top" and "vers/bottom" to describe engagement in anal intercourse. Despite the use of these labels, there is limited literature identifying various aspects that may impact SMM's chosen sex position label. The purpose of this study was to examine factors (i.e. sexual behavior, participants' anthropomorphic characteristics, and attraction to partners' attributes) associated with self-reported sex position label use. Participants (n = 4,802) were cisgender SMM from a U.S. nationwide cohort exploring missed opportunities for HIV prevention. The main analyses used iterative logistic regression models to predict self-reported sex position labels based on sexual behavior, participants' anthropomorphic characteristics, and attraction to partners' attributes. A higher proportion of participants identified as bottom/versatile (24%) followed by top/versatile (22.5%), versatile (20.3%), top (17.2%), and bottom (15.8%). Sexual attraction, behavior, and anthropomorphic characteristics poor-to-moderately predicted single sex position label categories. However, when considering near-adjacent sex positions (e.g. top/versatile as adjacent to top), model prediction improved substantially, indicating variability in self-labels and factors associated with each label. Sex positionality is complex and requires multidimensional measurement to fully understand this aspect of an individual's sexuality.
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