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RESEARCHERS MAP THE SEXUAL NETWORK OF AN ENTIRE HIGH SCHOOL
researchnews.osu.edu ^ | Jeff Grabmeier

Posted on 01/24/2005 10:01:51 PM PST by paltz

COLUMBUS, Ohio - For the first time, sociologists have mapped the romantic and sexual relationships of an entire high school over 18 months, providing evidence that these adolescent networks may be structured differently than researchers previously thought.

James Moody

The results showed that, unlike many adult networks, there was no core group of very sexually active people at the high school. There were not many students who had many partners and who provided links to the rest of the community.

Instead, the romantic and sexual network at the school created long chains of connections that spread out through the community, with few places where students directly shared the same partners with each other. But they were indirectly linked, partner to partner to partner. One component of the network linked 288 students - more than half of those who were romantically active at the school - in one long chain. (See figure for a representation of the network.)

James Moody, co-author of the study and professor of sociology at Ohio State University, said this network could be compared to rural phone lines, running from a long main trunk line to individual houses. As a comparison, many adult sexual networks are more like an airline hub system where many points are connected to a small number of hubs.


While many students were connected to much larger networks, they probably didn’t see it that way, Moody said. In fact, they probably had no idea of their connections to the network. “Many of the students only had one partner. They certainly weren’t being promiscuous. But they couldn’t see all the way down the chain.”


“We went into this study believing we would find a core model, with a small group of people who are sexually active,” Moody said. “We were surprised to find a very different kind of network.”

The results have implications for designing policies to stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases among adolescents, he said.

The study was conducted by Peter Bearman of Columbia University, Moody, and Katherine Stovel of the University of Washington. The results were published in a recent issue of the American Journal of Sociology.

The researchers used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. As part of that study in 1995, researchers interviewed nearly all students at an unidentified Midwestern school that they renamed “Jefferson High School.” It is an almost all-white school, and is the only public high school in this mid-sized city, which is more than an hour away from the nearest metropolitan area.

Researchers interviewed 832 of the approximately 1,000 students at the school. Students were asked to identify their sexual and romantic partners in the past 18 months from a roster of other students attending their school. (Romantic relationships were ones in which the students named the other as a romantic partner. Non-romantic sexual partners were those in which the participants said they had sexual intercourse, but were not dating).

Slightly more than half of all students reported having sexual intercourse, a rate comparable to the national average. The researchers mapped the network structure of the 573 students involved in a romantic or sexual relationship.

Moody said the results generate a snapshot of the network of romantic and sexual relations among teens attending the school in this 18-month period -- the first such image of an entire population such as this.

The most striking feature of the network was a single component that connected 52 percent (288) of the romantically involved students at Jefferson. This means student A had relations with student B, who had relations with student C and so on, connecting all 288 of these students.

While this component is large, it has numerous short branches and is very broad - the two most distant individuals are 37 steps apart. (Or to use a currently popular term, there were 37 degrees of separation between the two most-distant students.)

“From a student’s perspective, a large chain like this would boggle the mind,” Moody said. “They might know that their partner had a previous partner. But they don’t think about the fact that this partner had a previous partner, who had a partner, and so on.

“What this shows, for the first time, is that there are many of these links in a chain, going far beyond what anyone could see and hold in their head.”

Outside of this large component, there were numerous other smaller components in the network at Jefferson High. There were 63 simple pairs - two individuals whose only partnership was with each other.
All told, only 35 percent of the romantically active students (189) were involved in networks containing three or fewer students. There were very few components of intermediate size (4 to 15) students.

While many students were connected to much larger networks, they probably didn’t see it that way, Moody said. In fact, they probably had no idea of their connections to the network.

“Many of the students only had one partner. They certainly weren’t being promiscuous. But they couldn’t see all the way down the chain.”

The surprising thing about the network at Jefferson High was the near absence of cycling -- situations in which people have relationships with others close to them on the network, Moody said.

The lack of cycling seems traceable to rules that adolescents have about who they will not date. The teens will not date (from a female perspective) one’s old boyfriend’s current girlfriend’s old boyfriend. This would be considered taking “seconds” in a relationship.

“If you break up with someone, you may want to get as away from them as possible in your next relationship. You don’t want to be connected to them in some way by dating someone with a close relationship,” Moody said.

The practical result from such a rule is that no cores form, and that long, chain-like networks form instead. That has important implications for preventing the spread of STDs in teenage populations, according to Moody, Bearman and Stovel.

In adult populations, in which there are cores of sexually active people who are the main conduits of disease, you can focus education and other efforts to this select group.

But in the case of adolescents, “there aren’t any hubs to target, so you have to focus on broad-based interventions,” Moody said. “You can’t just focus on a small group.”

This also means it matters less which people you reach with your efforts. Networks such as the one seen in Jefferson High are extremely fragile and just breaking one link in the chain - any link - will stop that part of the network from spreading any further. If enough links are broken, the spread of STDs can be radically limited.

“The students in this network are not unusual. They are just average students, and not extremely active sexually. So social policies that could help some of them protect themselves from STDs could break a lot of these chains that can lead to the spread of disease.”

#

Contact: James Moody, (614) 292-1722; Moody.77@osu.edu

Written by Jeff Grabmeier, (614) 292-8457; Grabmeier.1@osu.edu


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: education; educationnews; healthcare; promiscuity; study; teens
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Comment #61 Removed by Moderator

Comment #62 Removed by Moderator

To: Citizen James

A guy who had 8 girls and one guy...

Okay, I think I'll leave this thread now.


63 posted on 01/24/2005 10:47:40 PM PST by Republican Wildcat
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To: woofie

All I can say is I don't think my high school had half the sexual relations as these kids are having. We played spin the bottle but none of us guys were hooking up with much sexually.


64 posted on 01/24/2005 10:48:39 PM PST by John Lenin (You have to be a lunatic yourself to appeal to the RAT base)
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To: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
To a first approximation (and I could be way off here) I would expect the boys to "pad" their resume and perhaps the girls to underreport same.

To be even more quantitative, I would multiply any boy's answer by 0.3, and any girl's by 2.5, to come up with a reasonable estimate of the number of sex partners.

-ccm

65 posted on 01/24/2005 10:48:46 PM PST by ccmay (Question Diversity)
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To: Citizen James

two orgies? that's the only way I can explain the triangulation there.


66 posted on 01/24/2005 10:48:58 PM PST by Kryptonite
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To: Citizen James

Hmmmmm. The two pairs on the left. Are they actually connected, or just adjacent?

I didn't see them as connected, but now I'm not sure.


67 posted on 01/24/2005 10:49:39 PM PST by null and void (Let there be dancing in the streets, drinking in the saloons and necking in the park!)
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To: Nataku X
the 10% figure doesn't include bis

No? Shows what I know, I guess ;)

Okay, so that's one exclusively homosexual student out of 573, and we're back down to .17%

68 posted on 01/24/2005 10:50:26 PM PST by general_re (How come so many of the VKs have been here six months or less?)
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To: ftlpdx

The nodes exist because of supply and demand... if Easy Eloise were shut down, the men would do it in the brothels.


69 posted on 01/24/2005 10:50:58 PM PST by Nataku X (You've heard, "Be more like Jesus." But have you ever heard, "Be more like Mohammad"?)
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To: paltz

Reason #3,758 to Homeschool your kids.


70 posted on 01/24/2005 10:51:09 PM PST by Palladin (Proud to be a FReeper!)
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To: Citizen James

71 posted on 01/24/2005 10:52:36 PM PST by Citizen James (Well done is better than well said. - B. Franklin)
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To: Citizen James
LOL

took me a second or two...

72 posted on 01/24/2005 10:54:05 PM PST by Drango (To Serve Man.....IT'S A COOKBOOK!)
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To: general_re

I had the displeasure of proofreading someone's dissertation on homosexuality. The original, unfounded claim, which the author tracked down & quoted from some gay lobbyist, was that there are only 10% exclusively heterosexual students, only 10% exclusively homosexual students, and that most people fall in a continuum in the middle... then the media spun that to 10% homosexuals. That, of course, is about as silly as the "a homeless person dies every 3 seconds" claim.


73 posted on 01/24/2005 10:54:15 PM PST by Nataku X (You've heard, "Be more like Jesus." But have you ever heard, "Be more like Mohammad"?)
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To: null and void

I don't see those two as connected.


74 posted on 01/24/2005 10:54:50 PM PST by general_re (How come so many of the VKs have been here six months or less?)
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To: Citizen James
Drango
75 posted on 01/24/2005 10:55:51 PM PST by Drango (To Serve Man.....IT'S A COOKBOOK!)
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To: standing united
No wonder there is a dumming down of Americans.

"Dumming down"?

Funny you should ask ...

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/fr/553341/posts

76 posted on 01/24/2005 10:58:19 PM PST by JennysCool (Rest in Peace, Great Carsoni!)
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To: Nataku X

Sounds like it was lifted straight from Kinsey - IIRC, he had a seven point "scale", ranging from "exclusively heterosexual" on one end to "exclusively homosexual" on the other, with gradations in between.


77 posted on 01/24/2005 11:02:41 PM PST by general_re (How come so many of the VKs have been here six months or less?)
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To: Citizen James

I think the two on the left are just dots really close togther but not connected.


78 posted on 01/24/2005 11:03:09 PM PST by lbmorris11 (America defeating terrorism and Liberalism)
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To: lbmorris11

I've revised... bttt


79 posted on 01/24/2005 11:03:49 PM PST by Citizen James (Well done is better than well said. - B. Franklin)
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Comment #80 Removed by Moderator


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