Review and Critique of the Quantitative Literature Regarding Attitudes toward Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
What Are Attitudes and Why Are They Important?
2. Are Attitudes toward CNM Positive or Negative?
2.1. Attitudes toward CNM Are Tepid
2.1.1. Studies Suggesting CNM Attitudes Are Negative
2.1.2. Studies Suggesting CNM Attitudes Are Neutral or Positive
2.2. CNM Relative Attitudes
2.2.1. CNM Compared to Monogamy
2.2.2. Types of CNM Compared to Each Other
3. What Predicts CNM Attitudes?
3.1. Differences Based on Sociodemographic Characteristics
3.1.1. Relationship Orientation
3.1.2. Sexual Orientation
3.1.3. Gender
3.1.4. Religion
3.1.5. Political Orientation
3.1.6. Summary of Predictiveness of Demographic Characteristics
3.2. Personality and Individual Differences
3.2.1. Authoritarianism and Social Dominance
3.2.2. Personality Traits
3.2.3. Sociosexuality and Erotophobia–Erotophilia
3.2.4. Attachment and Relationship Styles
3.3. Theoretical Integration of Predictors of CNM Attitudes
4. The Measurement of Attitudes toward CNM
4.1. Existing Scales
4.2. Critique and Use Recommendations
5. Directions for Future Research
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Authors | Sample (N) | Research Details | Outcome Details | Outcome Valence Finding Re: Attitudes ( Positive, Negative, Neutral) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Classic Outcome Studies | ||||
Burris [41] | 272 Canadian students (74% women) | Scenario rating included polyamory target (amongst other targets) | 3 semantic differential items 7-point scale alpha = 0.84 | 4.91 (7 most negative) |
Thompson et al. [42] | 362 US students (74% women) | Assess CNM constructs (“group sex”, “open relationship”, “group marriage”) or monogamy constructs (e.g., “exclusive relationship”, “traditional marriage”) (within-subjects) | 5 semantic differential items 7-point scale | 2.71 (7 most positive) |
Rodrigues et al. [43] | 202 (78% women) Portuguese, invited via social media | Monogamous, open, or polyamorous relationship scenarios (between-subjects) | 2 favorability toward open, polyamorous relationship items 7-point scale r = 0.90 | 3.35 (7 most positive) |
Rodrigues et al. [44] [some overlap 43] | Study 2: 565 (68% women), presumably Portuguese and presumably solicited via social media | Monogamous, open, or polyamorous relationship scenarios (between-subjects) | Study 2 Average of two favorability toward open, polyamorous relationships Items: 7-point scale r = 0.93 | 4.32 (7 most positive) |
Belief Instruments | ||||
Johnson et al. [33] | 3 samples Ntotal = 430 NMTurk1 = 100 (38% women) NMTurk2 = 196 (47% women) NUS students = 134 (62% women) | Attitudes toward Polyamory scale (7-item scale) scale development; EFA, CFA, test–retest (r = 0.89), convergent and divergent validity | 7-belief-item scale (e.g., relationships, children, STI topic content) 7-point scale alphas = 0.86–0.87 | 3.67 women 4.06 men (7 most positive) |
Thompson et al. [45] | 210 U.S. students (61% women) | Attitudes toward Polyamory [33] 6-item scale (poly changed to CNM; dropped religion item) | 7-point scale alpha6-items = 0.81 | 4.48 (7 most negative) |
Flicker & Sancier-Barbosa [57] | 1831 US students and social media volunteers (77% and 72% women, respectively) | Attitudes toward Polyamory [33] | 7-point scale alpha = 0.86 | 3.91 (7 most negative) |
Cardoso et al. [56] | 609 volunteers from general Portuguese population (68% women) | Validation of the Johnson et al. Attitudes toward Polyamory scale [33]. EFA, CFA, validity | 7-point scale alphas6 items = 0.84, 0.85 | 5.22, 7-item scale 5.51, 6-item scale (7 most positive) |
Cohen & Wilson [47] | Social media volunteers; Sample 1: 209 (57% women) Sample 2: 126 (54% women) | CNM Attitudes scale; scale development (EFA, CFA, demographic differences, correlates) | 8 items, but 1/8 are about self-participation in CNM rather than about others alpha = 0.91 | Approx. means: Sample 1: 4.30 Sample 2: 4.22 |
Stephens & Emmers-Sommer [46] | 443 US students | CNM Attitudes scale [47] | 7-point scale alpha = 0.93 | 3.80 full sample 2.72 only monogamous participants (N = 229) (1 most negative) |
Barrada & Castro [48] | 1261 students (Spain; 77% women) | CNM Attitudes scale [47] | 7-point scale | 3.75 (1 most negative) |
St Vil & Giles [59] | 902 paid African American participants via Qualtrics (51% women) | CNM Attitudes scale [47] | 7-point scale alpha = 0.91 | 4.06 (7 most negative) |
Powers et al. [58] | 549 nationwide sample of paid participants via prolific academics (48% women) | CNM Attitudes scale [47] + 2 sociosexuality scale items | alpha10 items = 0.85 | 3.37 (6 most positive) |
Moors et al. [49] | 1281 social network volunteers (71% women) | Attitudes toward CNM scale—6 items. Initial scale used | 7-point scale alpha = 0.79 | 2.95 (7 most positive) |
Ka et al. [50] | 140 social media Australian volunteers (70% women) | Attitudes toward CNM scale [49] | 7-point scale alpha = 0.79 | 3.36 (7 most positive) |
Moors et al. [60] | 110 social media (Craigslist, Facebook) sexual minorities (66%) women | Attitudes toward CNM scale [49] | 7-point scale alpha = 0.90 | 3.96 (7 most positive) |
CNM Persons or Relationship Attribute Ratings | ||||
Rodrigues et al. [43] | 202 Portuguese social media volunteers (78% women); these were the same participants as in Study 1 of Rodrigues et al. 2022 | Dehumanization assessment of mono, poly, and open targets | / 16 primary/animalistic emotions. Open/Poly = 4.26/3.95 (7 most negative/more animalistic) / 16 secondary/human emotions. Open/Poly = 3.87/3.61 (7 most positive/more human) | |
Rodrigues et al. [51] | 585 European participants, social media, and mailing list volunteers (78% women) | Dehumanization assessment of mono and CNM targets | 16 primary/animalistic CNM = 3.96 (7 most negative/more animalistic) 16 secondary/human CNM = 3.25 (7 most positive/more human) | |
Matsick et al. [52] | 126 Internet (Craig’s list, Facebook) volunteers (56% women) | Swinging, open, poly relationship definitions/scenarios (between-subjects) | Average of negatives (dirty, kinky, unhappy, unsatisfied w/ life) Swinging = 3.77, Poly = 3.37, Open = 3.57 Average of positives (moral, responsible, comforting, relationship satisfaction, selfless, mature) Swinging = 1.98, Poly = 2.57, Open = 2.23 (1–5, low-to-high level of attribute) There were other attributes rated that are not clearly negative/positive traits/characteristics | |
Burleigh et al. [54] | Mturk participants Study 1: 136 (43% women); Study 2: 131 (41% women); Study 3: 136 (41% women) | Mono and CNM vignettes (between-subjects) | Study 1: Satisfaction = 2.21; longevity = 2.07; trustworthy = 3.53 Study 2: Committed, emotionally secure, happy, in love, romantic (all below midpoint, range 1.98–3.33), while honest and trustworthy = 4.65, 4.21 Study 3: trustworthy, emotionally secure, intelligent, kind = around midpoint Unselfish, ethical, responsible (all below midpoint, range 3.42–3.84) Assessments of the relationship (vs. people in the relationship). Study 2/Study 3: trusting 4.42/4.62 reliable, comfortable, mature, dependable, meaningful, safe, moral, natural (all below midpoint, range 1.90–3.88) (1–7, where low is negative) | |
Conley et al. [53] | 1101 Internet Craigslist volunteers (65% women) | Mono and CNM definitions/vignettes (between-subjects) | Most positive attributes were rated below the scale midpoint: prevents STIs, comforting, stability, socially acceptable, closeness, reliable, respect, trust, safety, romantic, intimate, morality, financially good, honest, fosters self-acceptance, prevents jealousy, communication, prevents possessiveness (range 2.30–3.70). A few attributes were rated above the midpoint: companionship combats loneliness, prevents boredom, and provides independence (range 4.27–4.76) (1–7, low-to-high level of attribute) | |
Balzarini et al. [55] | Mturk participants, 447 monogamous participants are considered here (46% women) | Mono vs. 3 CNM groups (within-subjects) | Social Distance = 3.26, STI likelihood = 5.25, Promiscuity = 5.83 (1–7, where low is positive) | |
Rodrigues et al. [44] (some replication with [43]) | Study 1: 207 (78% women) Portuguese invited via social media [same participants in 2021?] Study 2: 565 (68% women), presumably Portuguese and presumably solicited via social media | Monogamous, open, or polyamorous relationship scenarios (between-subjects) | Open/Poly Study 1 Trustworthy = 4.50/4.98, condom use = 4.52/4.93, STI likely = 4.89/5.27 Study 2 Trustworthy = 5.06/4.96, condom use = 4.68/4.49, promiscuity = 3.75/3.81, sex satisfaction = 4.68/4.36, / morality = 4.28/4.00, / committed = 4.17/3.54, STI likely = 5.21/5.22 (1–7, not-at-all to extremely) | |
Grunt-Mejer & Campbell [61] | 375 students from 2 Polish and 1 UK universities (84% women) | Mono, poly, open, swinging, and cheating (within-subjects) | Aggregated trait ratings: relationship satisfaction/morality/cognition of poly = 4.36/4.05/3.72, open = 4.05/3.81/3.77/3.50, and swinging = 4.12/3.77/3.50 couple relationship vignettes (1–6, low-to-high level of attribute) | |
Grunt-Mejer & Lys [62] | 324 therapist-in-training volunteer students from 5 Polish universities (84% women) | Mono, poly, swinging, and cheating (within-subjects) | Aggregated trait ratings: relationship satisfaction/morality/cognition of poly = 3.25/3.71/3.85, and swinging = 3.48/3.71/3.90 couple relationship vignettes (1–6, low-to-high level of attribute) | |
Thompson et al. [63] | 793 Mturk and US student participants (57% women) | Poly, swinging, open, group sex, and monogamous role-playing (between-subject) | CNM groups combined: relationship/morality/cognition 4.54/4.52/4.39 (1–7, low-to-high level of attribute) | |
St Vil et al. [64] | 416 paid Qualtrics Panel participants (50% women) | Mono, CNM, and infidelity (within-subjects) | CNM relationship quality: 4.45 (1–7 low-to-high level of attribute) | |
Cohen [65] | 321 social media volunteers (61% women) | Mono, open, and poly (between-subjects) | Open: 4.08; Poly: 4.15 (1–7, where 7 = greatest relationship satisfaction) |
Appendix B
- [1] Attitudes toward Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM) by Moors et al. ([49], p. 228).
- The response scale consists of 1 for strongly disagree to 7 for strongly agree.
- 1 Every couple should be monogamous
- 2 If people want to be in openly/consensual nonmonogamous relationship, they have every right to do so
- 3 I would like to be in a nonmonogamous relationship
- 4 Monogamy is very important to me
- 5 If my partner wanted to be nonmonogamous, I would be open to that
- 6 I would consider being in an openly/consensually nonmonogamous relationship
- [2] Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM) Attitude scale by Cohen and Wilson ([47], p. 8)
- Cohen and Wilson [47] conducted an EFA and CFA; they reported an alpha of 0.91. Barrada and Castro [48] reported an alpha of 0.80. Powers et al. [58] used this scale but modified it by (a) adding two of Penke and Asendorf’s [90] sociosexuality attitude items and (b) changing the response scale to six points, thereby eliminating the “in between/neutral” point (4). Their alpha was 0.85. Stephens and Emmer-Sommer [46] reported an alpha of 0.93.
- Response scale consists of 1 = strongly disagree to 7 = strongly agree
- The items are listed in the highest to lowest factor loading.
- 6 It is possible to date other people while in a loving relationships with your partner
- 7 It is possible to have sexual relationships with other people while in a loving relationship with your partner
- 5 It is possible to have several satisfying intimate relationships at the same time
- 3 A monogamous relationship is the most satisfying type of relationship
- 4 Intimate relationships with more than one person are too complicated
- 1 You must be in a monogamous relationship to be in love
- 8 It is possible for one partner in a relationship to be monogamous while the other partner is not monogamous
- 2 I can see myself entering into a non-monogamous relationship
- [3] Attitudes Towards Polyamory scale by Johnson et al. ([33], p. 329)
- In their scale development study, Johnson et al. [33] reported an EFA and a CFA; they reported alphas with three samples of 0.88, 0.86, and 0.87. An EFA and CFA were replicated with a Portuguese version of this scale by Cardoso et al. [56], who reported alphas of 0.83 and 0.85. Flicker and Sancier-Barbosa [57] reported an alpha of 0.86 (both studies deleted item 7, so these alphas reflect a six-item scale). Grigoropoulos et al. [74] conducted a CFA and supported a one-factor solution with six items but failed to report an alpha. Thompson and colleagues [45] changed “polyamory” to “non-monogamy” and deleted item 7 due to poor reliability (i.e., the initial alpha of 0.51 rose to 0.81 with the deletion of religiosity/item 7).
- The response scale consists of 1 = disagree strongly to 7 = agree strongly.
- Items are listed in the highest to lowest factor loading.
- 1 Polyamory is harmful to children
- 2 Polyamorous relationships can be successful in the long term
- 3 I think that committed relationships with more than two individuals should have the same legal rights as married couples
- 4 People use polyamorous relationships as a way to cheat on their partners without consequence
- 5 I would allow my children to spend time with a peer who had polyamorous parents
- 6 Polyamorous relationships spread STIs (sexually transmitted infections)
- 7 Religious forms of polyamory (such as polygamy) are acceptable *item deleted by many
- [4] CNM Apprehension by Cunningham et al. ([76], p. 4)
- This is not an “attitudes toward CNM scale” but rather negative beliefs about the consequences that may occur if the participant were to engage in CNM.
- Cunningham et al. [76] determined the subscales using principal components analysis.
- Directional Stem: “Imagine you have the option to form a CNM romantic relationship. Below is a list of concerns that might influence your decision to enter or form a CNM relationship. Using the scale provided, please indicate how worried you would feel about each item.”
- Items are rated on a scale ranging from 1 = not at all worried to 5 = extremely worried.
- The items are listed in the highest to lowest factor loading.
- Relationship Conflict (alpha = 0.98)
- 1 A preferred partner has stronger feelings for someone other than you
- 2 A preferred partner might form a more emotionally intimate connection with someone other than you
- 3 I wouldn’t feel like THE most important person in my partner’s life
- 4 Favoritism of one partner over another
- 5 Losing a preferred partner’s commitment
- 6 Jealousy
- 7 Not feeling special
- 8 Your preferred partner is more sexually satisfied with another person
- 9 Your preferred partner is not exclusively involved with you
- 10 Competition between romantic partners
- 11 Lack of loyalty from a preferred partner
- 12 A preferred partner forming multiple, emotionally intimate romantic relationships
- 13 It would hurt my self-esteem
- 14 Unfair division of time spent among partners
- 15 Feeling belittled that my preferred partner is sleeping with other people.
- 16 Falling in love with a new partner makes a preferred partner leave you (or spend less time with you)
- 17 Becoming a third wheel
- 18 The relationship would be less stable
- 19 Tension or conflict with my relationship partner(s)
- 20 Feeling unable to trust each partner fully
- 21 A power imbalance among partners
- 22 Feeling like I am doing it for my preferred partner
- 23 Maintaining the relationship would require a lot of effort
- Moral Belief Violation (alpha = 0.93)
- 1 Children observing and copying the relationship
- 2 My children growing up with a CNM family structure
- 3 CNM worsening a society’s moral values
- 4 CNM goes against the belief that marriage is between two people
- 5 CNM goes against my religious beliefs or values
- 6 It might erode my family
- Reputational Damage (alpha = 0.88)
- 1 My family’s disapproval of the relationship
- 2 My friends disapproval of the relationship
- 3 Going against social norms
- 4 Feeling that other people will not respect me
- 5 Receiving a reputation for being “sexually loose”
- 6 It would strain my professional life
- Sexual Health Risk (alpha = 0.75)
- 1 One of my partners doesn’t always use protection with new partners (e.g., condoms)
- 2 Contracting a sexual disease (e.g., an STI)
- Same-Sex Intimacy (alpha = 0.78)
- 1 A possible homosexual encounter
- 2 Interactions with people who are LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer, etc.)
- 3 Having sex with someone of your least preferred sex/gender
- [5] Multidimensional Measurement of Attitudes Toward Consensual Non-Monogamy by Skakoon-Sparling et al. ([71], item content available at https://osf.io/q2yah; accessed on 10 June 2024).
- Overall reliability = 0.91.
- Items are assessed on a 1 = strongly agree to 5= strongly disagree scale.
- CNM Dysfunctional (alpha = 0.87)
- 1 Eventually, those in non-monogamous relationships will seek a monogamous one
- 2 If you are in a non-monogamous relationship, you do not have the right to be jealous
- 3 If you are in a non-monogamous relationship, you do not have the right to be upset if someone cheats
- 4 People are more likely to become involved in non-monogamy if they are emotionally immature
- 5 People who are non-monogamous are more likely to try to steal another persons’ romantic partner than people who are monogamous
- 6 Individuals in non-monogamous relationships have never experienced a meaningful monogamous relationship
- 7 Most non-monogamous individuals are socially deviant
- CNM is Immoral (alpha = 0.83)
- 1 If you are in a non-monogamous relationship, you should not hold a career working with children or youth
- 2 I can only be friends with individuals who are monogamous
- 3 Individuals in non-monogamous relationships should not express their lifestyle choices in areas where children or youth can see them
- 4 Discussing non-monogamy in public is inappropriate
- CNM is Healthy and Satisfying (alpha = 0.80)
- 1 Consensually non-monogamous relationships can be very fulfilling
- 2 A sexual relationship can be fulfilling if it is a non-monogamous one
- 3 Individuals in non-monogamous relationships can offer good relationship advice
- 4 I would be open to becoming friends with someone who I knew was in a non-monogamous relationship
- 5 A non-monogamous relationship can last just as long as a monogamous one
- [6] Moral, Psychological, and Competence-related traits rating scale Grunt-Mejer and Lys ([62], p. 65)
- Grunt-Mejer and Lys [62] do not identify which items belong on which scale with the exceptions of the ones noted (from [61]). The items are presumably listed in factor-related order. Grunt-Mejer and Lys [62] indicated there are five morality-related items (alphas = 0.80–0.82), five competence-related/cognitive ability items (alphas = 0.84–0.85), and eight relationship satisfaction items (alphas = 0.90–0.92). Using the longer scale in their conceptual replication, Thompson et al. [63] reported alphas of 0.88, 0.88, and 0.93, respectively. St. Vil and colleagues [64] reported an alpha of 0.94 for the seven-item relationship satisfaction measure.
- Responses were made on a 1–6-point Likert style scale, where 1 = the partners do not possess the trait, and 6 = the partners possess the trait to a large extent.
- 1 are honest
- 2 are trustworthy (Morality)
- 3 are tolerant
- 4 behave appropriately (Morality)
- 5 engage in social issues
- 6 are interesting
- 7 are intelligent (Cognitive Abilities)
- 8 cope well in their life (Cognitive Abilities)
- 9 achieve their goals easily
- 10 show presence of mind in difficult situations (Cognitive Abilities)
- 11 feel comfortable with each other
- 12 communicate well
- 13 are each other’s best friends
- 14 understand each other well
- 15 are happy with each other
- 16 the relationship meets their expectations
- 17 she is satisfied with the relationship
- 18 he is satisfied with the relationship
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Rye, B.J. Review and Critique of the Quantitative Literature Regarding Attitudes toward Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM). Sexes 2024, 5, 120-147. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5020010
Rye BJ. Review and Critique of the Quantitative Literature Regarding Attitudes toward Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM). Sexes. 2024; 5(2):120-147. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5020010
Chicago/Turabian StyleRye, B. J. 2024. "Review and Critique of the Quantitative Literature Regarding Attitudes toward Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM)" Sexes 5, no. 2: 120-147. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5020010
APA StyleRye, B. J. (2024). Review and Critique of the Quantitative Literature Regarding Attitudes toward Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM). Sexes, 5(2), 120-147. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5020010