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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Prevalence and Characteristics of Youth Sexting: A National Study

TLDR
National estimates of youth involved in sexting in the past year suggest that appearing in, creating, or receiving sexual images is far from being a normative behavior for youth.
Abstract
Objectives: To obtain national estimates of youth involved in sexting in the past year (the transmission via cell phone, the Internet, and other electronic media of sexual images), as well as provide details of the youth involved and the nature of the sexual images. Methods: The study was based on a cross-sectional national telephone survey of 1560 youth Internet users, ages 10 through 17. Results: Estimates varied considerably depending on the nature of the images or videos and the role of the youth involved. Two and one-half percent of youth had appeared in or created nude or nearly nude pictures or videos. However, this percentage is reduced to 1.0% when the definition is restricted to only include images that were sexually explicit (ie, showed naked breasts, genitals, or bottoms). Of the youth who participated in the survey, 7.1% said they had received nude or nearly nude images of others; 5.9% of youth reported receiving sexually explicit images. Few youth distributed these images. Conclusions: Because policy debates on youth sexting behavior focus on concerns about the production and possession of illegal child pornography, it is important to have research that collects details about the nature of the sexual images rather than using ambiguous screening questions without follow-ups. The rate of youth exposure to sexting highlights a need to provide them with information about legal consequences of sexting and advice about what to do if they receive a sexting image. However, the data suggest that appearing in, creating, or receiving sexual images is far from being a normative behavior for youth.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Teen girls, sexual double standards and ‘sexting’: Gendered value in digital image exchange:

TL;DR: This paper explored gender inequities and sexual double standards in teens' digital image exchange, drawing on a UK qualitative research project on youth "sexting" and developed a critique of post-feminist media cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexting prevalence and correlates: A systematic literature review

TL;DR: Findings are discussed in terms of the trends indicated by the data, which provided substantiation that sexting behaviour is associated with numerous behavioural, psychological, and social factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexting, Substance Use, and Sexual Risk Behavior in Young Adults

TL;DR: Results suggest that sexting is robustly associated with high-risk sexual behavior, and at least some participants in this study were incurring new sexual risks after sexted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Multiple Forms of Sexting Behavior Among Youth: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

TL;DR: The prevalence of sexting has increased in recent years and increases as youth age, and further research focusing on nonconsensual sexts is necessary to appropriately target and inform intervention, education, and policy efforts.
Posted Content

Annual research review: harms experienced by child users of online and mobile technologies: the nature, prevalence and management of sexual and aggressive risks in the digital age

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the nature and prevalence of such risks, and evaluated the evidence regarding the factors that increase or protect against harm resulting from these risks, so as to inform the academic and practitioner knowledge base.
References
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Online victimization: A report on the nation’s youth.

TL;DR: Finkelhort and Wolfak as discussed by the authors found that nearly 24 million youth, ages 10 through 17, were online regularly in 1999 and that sexual solicitations they do not want, sexual material they did not seek, and people who threaten and harass them.
Book

Childhood Victimization: Violence, Crime, and Abuse in the Lives of Young People

TL;DR: Finkelhor and Kendall-Tackett as discussed by the authors described the Juvenile Victim Justice System: A Concept for Helping Victims (David Finkelhor with Ted Cross and Elise Cantor).
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell Phone Survey Feasibility in The U.S.: Sampling and Calling Cell Numbers Versus Landline Numbers

TL;DR: The design and data collection methods are described; the results from the two samples are compared; and the outcomes of two experimental manipulations designed to improve the cell phone response rate are presented.

Sexting: A typology

TL;DR: In this article, a typology of sexting episodes based on a review of over 550 cases obtained from a national survey of law enforcement agencies is presented, where the cases all involved youth-produced sexual images, defined as images of minors created by minors that could qualify as child pornography under applicable criminal statutes.
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