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College hookups: More talk than sex

LINCOLN, Neb., Sept. 14 (UPI) -- When it comes to college hookups -- casual sex outside of dating or exclusive relationships -- there is more talk than sex, U.S. researchers determined.

Lead author Amanda Holman, a graduate student in University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and Alan Sillars of the University of Montana, drew their findings from a nearly 300-student sample at a large public university.

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The study, published in the journal Health Communication, found 84 percent of students said they had talked with their college friends in the previous four months about hookups. Fifty-four percent of the students had participated in a sexual hookup during the school year -- 63 percent were male and 45 percent were female, the study said.

Thirty-seven percent of students reported two or more hookups during the school year, but 90 percent of the participants assumed that a "typical" student had been involved in two or more hookups, the study said.

The researchers said regular talk about hookups had a "normalizing" effect on students' views about the practice leading to a more approving attitude toward hookups and, often, riskier sexual behavior.

"We were interested in how communication about hooking up with friends and family may justify or normalize a potential risky behavior," Holman said in a statement. "Students with strong ties to peers and frequent peer conversation about sex were more strongly related to participation in hookups and more favorable attitudes towards hooking up."

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