Uecker Jeremy E, Angotti Nicole, Regnerus Mark D
Department of Sociology and Population Research Center, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station A1700, Austin, TX 78712-0118, USA.
Soc Sci Res. 2008 Dec;37(4):1200-15. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2007.09.006.
Reports from academic and media sources assert that many young people substitute non-vaginal sexual activities for vaginal intercourse in order to maintain what could be called "technical virginity." Explanations for technical virginity, however, are based on weak empirical evidence and considerable speculation. Using a sample of 15-19-year-olds from Cycle 6 of the National Survey of Family Growth, we examine technical virginity and its motivations. The results suggest that religious adolescents are less likely than less-religious ones to opt for non-vaginal sex over total abstinence. Abstinence pledgers who are virgins are neither more nor less likely than nonpledgers who are virgins to substitute non-vaginal sex for intercourse. Moreover, religion and morality are actually the weakest motivators of sexual substitution among adolescents who have not had vaginal sex. Preserving technical virginity is instead more common among virgins who are driven by a desire to avoid potential life-altering consequences, like pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.
来自学术和媒体渠道的报道称,许多年轻人用非阴道性行为替代阴道性交,以维持所谓的“技术贞操”。然而,对技术贞操的解释基于薄弱的实证证据和大量猜测。我们使用来自全国家庭成长调查第6轮的15至19岁青少年样本,研究技术贞操及其动机。结果表明,与宗教信仰较弱的青少年相比,有宗教信仰的青少年选择非阴道性行为而非完全禁欲的可能性更小。是处女的禁欲宣誓者与同样是处女的非宣誓者相比,用非阴道性行为替代性交的可能性并无差异。此外,在没有过阴道性行为的青少年中,宗教和道德实际上是性替代最薄弱的动机。相反,在那些因渴望避免潜在的改变人生的后果(如怀孕和性传播疾病)而受驱使的处女中,保持技术贞操更为常见。