Potentially useful survey
Posted: Thu May 02, 2013 7:55 am
A request was sent out today to many of those involved in sex research asking us to find participants for an Internet survey run by Prof. Richard Lippa and his students. Lippa is one of the good guys, though he still needs to learn more about gender diversity.
Strategically it would be great if EA folks could fill this out and furthermore let the researchers know their status (preferred gender designation, sexual orientation, and hormonal status, etc.) at the end. It would help to get Lippa et al. to start thinking about hormones and much more about diversity. His work has a significant impact on other researchers and this may be one more step toward greater recognition of Male-to-Eunuch and of BIID.
Here’s Lippa’s response to a question from Richard Wassersug about forcing all participants to choose “male,” “female,” or “transgender” as the first question:
No offense intended. Sometimes it's hard to cover all possibilities. If I were you I would have entered "male." Then, at the end of the survey there is a text box where you could make any comments you wanted about the study and about yourself (but of course, you couldn't know this before completing the survey). We definitely weren't trying to exclude anyone from the study.
Here’s Lippa’s original request for participants:
I’m writing to announce a new Internet study that I and my students are conducting. In this study, participants are asked to rate their degree of sexual attraction to male and female swimsuit models (which are represented as drawn illustrations). Models vary in their attractiveness and ethnicity.
THE SURVEY IS BRIEF!!—it takes about five minutes to complete. [Actually, closer to 10 minutes.] Participants first answer a short set of survey questions and then rate about 30 swimsuit models.
TO ALL POTENTIAL PARTICIPANTS: We would like to collect data from a sexually diverse group of participants—so feel free to pass this link on to any group, publication, or online discussion group that serves gays, lesbians, bisexual, trangendered, transsexual, and asexual individuals (and other groups in the rainbow spectrum).
The link to the survey is:
https://csufullertonpsych.qualtrics.com ... BuaKoifxXv
Thanks for your help!
Richard Lippa, PhD
Strategically it would be great if EA folks could fill this out and furthermore let the researchers know their status (preferred gender designation, sexual orientation, and hormonal status, etc.) at the end. It would help to get Lippa et al. to start thinking about hormones and much more about diversity. His work has a significant impact on other researchers and this may be one more step toward greater recognition of Male-to-Eunuch and of BIID.
Here’s Lippa’s response to a question from Richard Wassersug about forcing all participants to choose “male,” “female,” or “transgender” as the first question:
No offense intended. Sometimes it's hard to cover all possibilities. If I were you I would have entered "male." Then, at the end of the survey there is a text box where you could make any comments you wanted about the study and about yourself (but of course, you couldn't know this before completing the survey). We definitely weren't trying to exclude anyone from the study.
Here’s Lippa’s original request for participants:
I’m writing to announce a new Internet study that I and my students are conducting. In this study, participants are asked to rate their degree of sexual attraction to male and female swimsuit models (which are represented as drawn illustrations). Models vary in their attractiveness and ethnicity.
THE SURVEY IS BRIEF!!—it takes about five minutes to complete. [Actually, closer to 10 minutes.] Participants first answer a short set of survey questions and then rate about 30 swimsuit models.
TO ALL POTENTIAL PARTICIPANTS: We would like to collect data from a sexually diverse group of participants—so feel free to pass this link on to any group, publication, or online discussion group that serves gays, lesbians, bisexual, trangendered, transsexual, and asexual individuals (and other groups in the rainbow spectrum).
The link to the survey is:
https://csufullertonpsych.qualtrics.com ... BuaKoifxXv
Thanks for your help!
Richard Lippa, PhD