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The Kinsey scale attempts to describe a person's sexual experience or response at a given time.
For example, the Kinsey scale can be divided between those exclusively heterosexual and everyone else.
On the Kinsey scale, a 0 is someone who is only heterosexual.
The Kinsey Scale does not address all possible sexual expressions.
Today, many sexology see the Kinsey scale as simplistic.
He developed the Kinsey Scale to measure sexual orientation.
Today, many sexologists see the Kinsey scale as relevant to sexual orientation but not comprehensive enough to cover all sexual identity issues.
Kinsey scale, sexual orientation (Klein scale is more detailed but not yet as well known)
The Kinsey scale shows that sexuality is a continuum, meaning it moves little by little from heterosexuality to homosexuality.
An operationalized version, the Kinsey Scale Test.
Their name is a play of words on "Kinsey 6", the end of the Kinsey scale defined as exclusively homosexual.
The Kinsey scale has been praised for dismissing the dichotomous classification of sexual orientation and allowing for a new perspective on human sexuality.
On the Kinsey scale, people who rank anywhere from 2 to 4 are often considered bisexual; they are often not fully one extreme or the other.
A third concern with the Kinsey scale is that it inappropriately measures heterosexuality and homosexuality on the same scale, making one a tradeoff of the other.
Benjamin's Scale references and uses the Kinsey scale in distinguishing between "true transsexualism" and "transvestism".
This perception explains how the Kinsey Scale is used to label sexual orientation despite its original design and use to explain a person's sexual history or past.
The range of expression he creates later becomes known as the Kinsey scale, which ranks overall sexuality from completely heterosexual to completely homosexual and everything in-between.
In an episode of the TV series 'Revenge' Nolan refers to himself as "About a 3 on the Kinsey scale"
In response to the criticism of the Kinsey scale only measuring two dimensions of sexual orientation, Klein developed a multidimensional grid for describing sexual orientation.
This study asked people to indicate their sexual orientation using the Kinsey scale and then had others view very brief silent clips of the people talking using thin-slicing.
The Kinsey scale provides a classification of sexual orientation based on the relative amounts of heterosexual and homosexual experience or psychic response in one's history at a given time.
Instead of three categories (heterosexual, bisexual and homosexual), a seven-category Kinsey Scale system was used (an 8th category for asexuals was added by Kinsey's associates).
In the mid-twentieth century, Alfred Kinsey rated individuals from 0 to 6 according to their sexual orientation from heterosexual to homosexual, known as the Kinsey scale.
SHOUTS & MURMURS imagining additions to the Kinsey scale.
Billy mentions the Kinsey scale, on which Billy describes himself as a "perfect six," but Gabriel admits he does not know where on the scale he falls.