Kinsey scale
The Kinsey scale, introduced by Alfred Kinsey in 1948, rates sexual orientation from 0 (exclusively heterosexual) to 6 (exclusively homosexual), with X for no socio-sexual response.
A self-identification: Alfred Kinsey’s 0–6 scale (plus X) placing sexual orientation on a continuum rather than a binary. (Alfred Kinsey, 1948)
Groups
- 0 — Exclusively heterosexual — Attraction and experience exclusively with the other sex.
- 1 — Predominantly heterosexual — Mostly heterosexual, only incidentally homosexual.
- 2 — Mostly heterosexual — Predominantly heterosexual, but more than incidentally homosexual.
- 3 — Equally bisexual — Equally heterosexual and homosexual.
- 4 — Mostly homosexual — Predominantly homosexual, but more than incidentally heterosexual.
- 5 — Predominantly homosexual — Mostly homosexual, only incidentally heterosexual.
- 6 — Exclusively homosexual — Attraction and experience exclusively with the same sex.
- X — Asexual — No socio-sexual contacts or reactions.
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