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| Some, but not all of this may be explained by a gender imbalance in the sex ratio of Tinder users: In 2015, 62% of Tinder users were male and 38% female. | | Some, but not all of this may be explained by a gender imbalance in the sex ratio of Tinder users: In 2015, 62% of Tinder users were male and 38% female. |
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| Do women have become sluttier? Contrary to people's impression, women do not appear to have more sex today, e.g. in [[Demographics of inceldom#Germany|Germany]], France (Alexander 2013), the U.S. (see data below) women have slightly less sex (though not as much less as men), likely due to weaker monogamy norms/later marriage. But a minority of women (e.g. around 21.87% of female Tinder users) does seem to have ''lots of sex'' and can get it substantially more easily than men, which may cause impressions of intensified sluttiness with a [[#The_top_5-20.25_of_men_.28ie._.22Chads.22.29_are_now_having_more_sex_than_ever_before|diverging rate]] of sex between the least and most sexually active. So even though most people have less sex, a sex elite men and women have more. The impression of increased sluttiness may also come from the rise of self-sexualization (e.g. in online media, but also in the public) which appears to be driven by female intra-sexual competition and economic uncertainty/inequality, i.e. women self-sexualizing themselves to get attention from the more and more rare economically advantaged men (Blake 2018), as well as the overall reduced pressure to behave that is put on women (e.g. Dytham 2018).
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| <span style="font-size:125%">'''Data:'''</span> | | <span style="font-size:125%">'''Data:'''</span> |
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| The female risk ratio is here the most interesting number. It states how much more likely women engaged in the respective behavior. | | The female risk ratio is here the most interesting number. It states how much more likely women engaged in the respective behavior. |
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| {| class="wikitable"
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| |+ Had no sex in the past year, aged 18-30, by sex (GSS)
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| |-
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| ! Year
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| ! Men (N, 95% CI)
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| ! Women (N, 95% CI)
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| |-
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| | 1990-2006
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| | 13.4% (2013, 11.9%, 14.9%)
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| | 11.5% (2489, 10.3%, 12.8%)
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| |-
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| | 2012-2018
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| | 20.8% (682, 17.7%, 23.8%)
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| | 14.5% (742, 12.0%, 17.0%)
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| |-
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| | z = 4.6, p < .00001
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| | z = 2.2, p < .03
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| |}
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| <span style="font-size:125%">'''Quotes:'''</span> | | <span style="font-size:125%">'''Quotes:'''</span> |