Sexuality in adolescence Anna Ševčíková (asevciko@fss.muni.cz) Overview • Effects of puberty on sexual development • Review of developmental tasks • Sexual behaviors in numbers • Psychosocial factors related to sexual development Biological markers of puberty • Phase of adrenarche: emissions of androgens from adrenal cortex • In girls at age 6 (years), in boys at age 8 (years) • Growth of primary and secondary sexual characteristics • Breast, penis, scrotum growth, pubic hair growth (after the start of breast growth at age 10), testes growth (at age 12) • Growth spurt (in girls at age 11, in boys at age 14) • Changes in the proportion of muscle mass and fat • Boys: 1,5 x muscle mass than in girls, girls: 2 x body fat than boys • enlargement of circulatory and respiratory system Psychological aspects of puberty • Girls: • Increase of negative emotions (anger, sadness) (due to luteinizing hormone) • rapidity of pubertal changes – effects on mood • Fast changes → more problems • Slower pace → more time for adjustment → better wellbeing • Boys: • Higher amount of testosterone → less mood problems but more behavioral problems • Association with the approaching the ideal of male beauty Earlier puberty and consequences • Girls: • Poor academic career, poor mental health (lower self-esteem, suicidal ideations), problem behavior (drug, earlier sexual debut, conflicts with parents) • Reasons: • No longer group belongingness • deviation from female beauty • Greater peer pressure with regards to dating and sexuality • Boys? Review of developmental tasks I • 11 – 14 years • Context: parental surveillance, same-sex peer, media effects • Recognition of one-self as sexual being (sexually attracted to others, sexually attractive for others, mindful about reproductive capacity) • Beginning of the development of sexual fantasies • Differentiation of sexual activities in girls and boys • Application of gender roles in sexual activities • Double standard (traditional sexual scripts – Gagnon & Simon, 1973) • Homosocial norms stemming from same-sex peer norms • Reinforcement of gender roles due to media Review of developmental tasks II • 15 – 18 years • Same-sex group, mixed-sex group, less strong parental authority, stronger media consumption? • Sexual acts are more embedded in non-sexual social relationships • More open to heterosocial norms • Sexual experiences with several peers • Maturation of the development of sexual fantasies • Consolidated understanding of gender differences in sexual roles and activities • E.g. differences in a good or bad girl Review of developmental tasks III • 18 + (emerging adulthood) • Partner selection • More active sexual life • Men learn to love, women learn to have sex • Legitimization of sexual activities (experimentation) • Stabilization of sexual identity/orientation Sexual behaviors • Sexual fantasies • The most common (72 %) • Function: • learning one’s own sexual needs/desires • prediction of one’s own sexual responses • Masturbation • 1/3 girls and 2/3 boys masturbate at age 13-15 • BUT at age 19: 21% women and 90% men • Not really substitute activity – more common among sexual active individuals • Partner sex • The most common sexual script: kissing – necking – petting – vaginal/sexual intercourse • Not always universal Age of sexual debut (vaginal intercourse) • CZ (Weiss, 2012) Age of sexual debut (Bozon & Kontula, 1998) GR BE DK FI FR DE 1922- 1931) 1932- 1941) 1942- 1951) 1952- 1961) 1962-6) 1972-3) 1967- 1971) 22,8 17,5 17,3 19,0 20,4 17,4 20,9 18,0 18,4 17,4 16,7 19,0 18,0 16,6 17,0 18,1 17,7 17,7 18,8 20,7 18,0 21,1 20,2 20,9 Age of sexual debut (Bozon & Kontula, 1998) 1922- 1931) 1932- 1941) 1942- 1951) 1952- 1961) 1962-6) 1972-3) 1967- 1971) 22,817,3 20,4 20,9 18,4 19,0 18,8 20,7 18,0 21,1 20,2 GB IS NL NO PT CH 19,1 17,0 17,3 16,4 16,3 18,3 18,3 18,1 17,5 16,2 19,0 18,2 18,44 19,5 19,321,2 21,618,717,820,9 19,2 24,319,5 16,4 Psychosocial factors related to sexual development • Biological characteristics: early puberty + menarché at a lower age – earlier sexual debut (Crokett et al., 2003) • Psychological characteristics: • Depression in younger girls → earlier sexual debut • No association between self-esteem and earlier sexual debut • Problem behavior: criminal or unethical behavior → earlier sexual debut • Risk behavior = more sexual experiences • Attitudes: stronger religiosity – less sexual experiences • Academic achievement – better grades, academic ambitions – delayed sexual debut Psychosocial factors related to sexual development • Social factors • Quality of relationships between parents and children • Quality of communication between parents and children • Monitoring children • Family structure • single-parent household = earlier sexual debut • Older siblings • Lower social-economic status of the family Psychosocial factors related to sexual development • Social factors • Peers • Evaluate and approve the selection of a romantic partner • collective = facilitate/inhibit following sexual norms • Peer effects (Brown, 1999; Connolly & Goldberg, 1999) • Initiation phase (11–13): interest in the opposite sex • Status phase (14–16): romantic relationships within peer groups • Affection phase (17-20): reorientation towards the dyad • Romantic partner • Sex primary within romantic relationships Psychosocial factors related to sexual development • Social factors • Poverty in their living environment • Media as a superpeer! Summary • Greater knowledge about effects of puberty on girls • More risks for girls • Early sexual debut = riskier for girls • Exploration of sexuality = riskier for girls (due to double standard) • Sexually active teens = wider repertoire of sexual activities • The age of sexual debut decreases but not necessarily valid for our generation • The strongest peer pressure related to sexuality in mid-adolescence • Family and poverty: strong social factors in sexual development • Media