作者
Jesús Castro‐Calvo,Patricia Beltrán-Martínez,Rafael Ballester‐Arnal,Léna Nagy,Mónika Koós,Shane W. Kraus,Zsolt Demetrovics,Marc N. Potenza,Dominik Batthyány,Sophie Bergeron,Joël Billieux,Peer Briken,Julius Burkauskas,Georgina Cárdenas-López,Joana Carvalho,Lijun Chen,Giacomo Ciocca,Ornella Corazza,Rita I. Csákó,David P. Fernandez,Elaine F. Fernandez,Hironobu Fujiwara,Johannes Fuß,Roman Gabrhelík,Ateret Gewirtz‐Meydan,Biljana Gjoneska,Mateusz Gola,Joshua B. Grubbs,Hashim Talib Hashim,Yi‐Ping Hsieh,Md. Saiful Islam,Mustafa Ismail,Martha Cecilia Jiménez Martínez,Tanja Jurin,Ondrej Kalina,Verena Klein,András Költő,Sang‐Kyu Lee,Karol Lewczuk,Chung‐Ying Lin,Christine Löchner,Silvia López-Alvarado,Kateřina Lukavská,Percy Mayta‐Tristán,D.J. Miller,Oľga Orosová,Gábor Orosz,Sungkyunkwan University’s Research Team,Fernando P. Ponce,Gonzalo R. Quintana,Gabriel C. Quintero Garzola,Jano Ramos‐Diaz,Kévin Rigaud,Ann Rousseau,Marco de Tubino Scanavino,Marion K. Schulmeyer,Pratap Sharan,Mami Shibata,Sheikh Shoib,Vera Sigre-Leirós,Luke Sniewski,Ognen Spasovski,Vesta Steiblienė,Dan J. Stein,Aleksandar Štulhofer,Berk C. Ünsal,Marie‐Pier Vaillancourt‐Morel,Marie Claire Van Hout,Beáta Bőthe
摘要
Sexual desire is a complex construct with important implications for sexual functioning and well-being. In this research, we translated the Sexual Desire Inventory (SDI-2), a widely used scale for assessing sexual (desire), into 25 languages from English and used data from the International Sex Survey (ISS) to (a) investigate its psychometric properties (i.e. factorial structure, reliability, validity, and measurement invariance) and (b) explore the expression of sexual desire across different countries, genders, and sexual orientations. A total of 82,243 participants from 42 countries completed the SDI-2, along with other sexuality-related scales. Confirmatory factor analysis supported a three-factor solution for the SDI-2 (CFI = .980; RMSEA = .060), encompassing the domains of "Partner-related," "Attractive-person-related," and "Solitary" sexual desire. The reliability of the total score and subscales were excellent. Likewise, correlations with other sexuality-related variables were positive yet weak-to-moderate in effect size. Measurement invariance tests supported its use across countries, languages, genders, and sexual orientations. Analysis of SDI-2 scores according to these variables supported its ability to capture group-based differences in sexual desire. In sum, the SDI-2 constitutes a psychometrically robust measure for the assessment of sexual desire in non-clinical samples with utility in large-scale cross-cultural studies.