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Citation

Uecker, Jeremy E.; Pearce, Lisa D.; & Andercheck, Brita (2015). The Four U’s: Latent Classes of Hookup Motivations among College Students. Social Currents, 2(2), 163-181. PMCID: PMC4825812

Abstract

College students’ “hookups” have been the subject of a great deal of research in recent years. Motivations for hooking up have been linked to differences in well-being after the hookup, but studies detailing college students’ motivations for engaging in hookups focus on single motivations. Using data from the 2010 Duke Hookup Survey, we consider how motivations for hooking up cluster to produce different classes, or profiles, of students who hook up, and how these classes are related to hookup regret. Four distinct classes of motivations emerged from our latent class analysis: Utilitarians (50 percent), Uninhibiteds (27 percent), Uninspireds (19 percent), and Unreflectives (4 percent). We find a number of differences in hookup motivation classes across social characteristics, including gender, year in school, race-ethnicity, self-esteem, and attitudes about sexual behavior outside committed relationships. In addition, Uninspireds regret hookups more frequently than members of the other classes, and Uninhibiteds report regret less frequently than Utilitarians and Uninspireds. These findings reveal the complexity of motivations for hooking up and the link between motivations and regret.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2329496515579761

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2015

Journal Title

Social Currents

Author(s)

Uecker, Jeremy E.
Pearce, Lisa D.
Andercheck, Brita

PMCID

PMC4825812

ORCiD

Pearce - 0000-0001-6210-863X