Abstract

University is characterized by a critical stage where students experience their sexuality, across a range of relationships. From these experiences, university students consolidate their personality and their sexual role. Factors such as age, sex, or traumatic experiences of violence or sexual abuse can affect their sexual role. The present study aims to analyze how the variables age, sex and having suffered abuse or violence may predict sexual satisfaction and inhibition. In addition, we analyze the mediating effect that sexual role plays on these relationships. For this purpose, Bem Sex Role Inventory (BSRI-12), Sociosexual Orientation Inventory (SOI-R), Inhibited Sexual Desire Test (ISD) and New Sexual Satisfaction Scale (NESS) were administered to 403 university students. The findings report that sex (β = −0.313), age (β = −0.116) and being a survivor of sexual assault (β = 0.413) are predictive of male role, but not from the female role. Also, people with more male features tend to have lower levels of commitment and inhibition than those who have more female ones.

Highlights

  • Methods403 students from the University of Jaén (Jaén, Spain) voluntarily participated

  • The data screening carried out before the factorial treatment of the subscales showed that our data did not breach the assumption of additivity

  • To confirm the validity and internal structure of the scales used, a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was performed with the data obtained for each scale

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Summary

Methods

403 students from the University of Jaén (Jaén, Spain) voluntarily participated. The ages of the students were between 18 and 45 years old (M: 22.26, SD: 3.20). Of the total of the participants 302 (74.9%) were women and 101 (25.1%) were men. These percentages are proportional to the distribution of gender in the total population of educators in Spain (National Statistics Institute, 2015). Participants belonged to the degrees of social education (39.21%), primary education (14.89%), psychology (19.35%), chemistry (10.17%), law (10.17%) and nursing (8.44%). This research has been approved by the Ethics

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