Talk:Prevalence_of_homosexuality Talk:Prevalence_of_homosexuality

Talk:Prevalence of homosexuality - Definition and Overview

I'm not a native speaker. Can someone check the last paragraph about the Hamburg Institute for Sexual Research with respect to linguistics? Thanks! --Amys 17:21, 13 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Statistical problems

The various survey summaries do not really do justice to the referenced articles.

The first summary cites some research that talks about sexual behavior only, in the United States only. The article is accurately quoted, but I'm not sure the attribution of the ultimate source is correct. Certainly it's incomplete, and moreover you can't access the original study from the link given.

The second summary is not clear that this was a survey in Calgary, Canada, only, and muddles behavior vs. self-identification, which is clear in the page referenced.

The third summary should mention that the survey took place in 1992 in the United States only. The quote given is incorrect; it should be "for men...4.9% since 18 years [of age]". It's unclear whether this is self-identification or sexual behavior.

The change in numbers for the German studies seem extraordinary. The summary does not say whether these numbers are for behavior or for self-identification, and whether or not they are measuring the same thing in the same way in the two different years. Also, what is the demographic sample - West Germans? Inhabitants of a particular city? What was the impact of German reunification on the sample? I would seriously question the factual conclusion made in this paragraph unless this study has been replicated. I can't really evaluate the trustworthiness of this study because the pages cited are all in German.

In general, it should be mentioned that the "10%" figure is attributed to Kinsey; see Kinsey Reports for more info on that. -- Beland 03:03, 14 Sep 2004 (UTC)

I don't think it was a nation-wide survey. But even if you criticise this study from a methodical point of view, it is nevertheless important to mention insofar as it gives a hint that those numbers need not be a constant. I mean, perhaps this is the reason why Kinsey achieved much higher numbers in the 40's. --Amys 03:16, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)
My guess would be that it's a badly constructed study that is simply experiencing severe measurement errors. The Kinsey study are widely acknowledged as flawed, and there are (or should be) notes to that effect everywhere it is mentioned in Wikipedia. I have no basis for determining whether it's a reputable, well-constructed study or a junk survey done for PR or something, since the supporting material is in German. If these are not reliable numbers, they might need to be discarded, but could be kept with suitable context. I certainly wouldn't say that they proved anything until I knew whether or not they were reliable. -- Beland 01:14, 6 Oct 2004 (UTC)
The broad assertion that "major historical shifts can occur in the prevalence of homosexuality" is simply not supported by the article it links to. The article mentions that fewer boys in 1990 in this particular study acknowledged having had homosexual experiences, but (if the combined efforts of my elementary German and Babelfish are correct in translating) it also explains that result as the result of changing social standards for self-identification, and not proof that there was necessarily such a dramatic change in their activity or their inclination. If it does respresent a decline in homosexual activity, it needs to be put in context of heterosexual activity among 17-year-old boys, which I'd bet was also a lot more prevalent in post-"Summer of Love" 1970 than in middle-of-the-AIDS-pandemic 1990. Even if you suppose that the study soundly demonstrates (as Amys seems to want) that there were simply fewer homosexual Jungen in Hamburg in 1990 than in 1970, that's still not a "major historical shift". It's a single datum about a small demographic. And for all we know, it just means that all the junge Stossenbumser in Hamburg were visiting Amsterdam to buy drugs when the 1990 study was done. :) Tverbeek 20:22, 9 Oct 2004 (UTC)
Strange notion that anybody who has made same-sex sexual experience was a homosexual Junge. Obviously you see homosexuality as a condition and not a behaviour. What about the old Greeks? Was everybody "gay" in those times? That "major historical shifts can occur" is a platitude in view of historical knowledge about antiquity. Also compare the historical statistics of Michael Rocke's Forbidden Friendships. By the way, what is a "Stossenbumser"? Never heard of that! ;-) --Amys 01:29, 1 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Backing up?

In general, surveys quoted by anti-gay activists tend to show figures nearer 1%, while surveys quoted by gay activists tend to show figures nearer 10%, with a mean of 4-5% figure most often cited in mainstream media reports.

This needs to be backed up with at least one example of each side, preferrably more. Also, the word mean here is inaccurate.

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