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1 ramework for the evolution of indiscriminate sexual behaviour.
2 leads to the evolution of sophisticated male sexual behaviour.
3 in San Francisco is strongly associated with sexual behaviour.
4 ls that regulate mammalian communication and sexual behaviour.
5 ed new light on the genetic determination of sexual behaviour.
6 ermatogenesis and a loss of instinctual male sexual behaviour.
7 l's perception of risk, resulting in riskier sexual behaviour.
8 mouse clitoris and penis and their roles in sexual behaviour.
9 ossible molecular mechanisms regulating male sexual behaviour.
10 atively high socioeconomic status, and risky sexual behaviour.
11 es conspecific sex pheromone information for sexual behaviour.
12 h after enrolment to assess social harms and sexual behaviour.
13 ating were probably present at the origin of sexual behaviour.
14 orphology and an important influence on male sexual behaviour.
15 onomic factors, including schooling, and for sexual behaviour.
16 transmission rather than increases in risky sexual behaviour.
17 tors play a considerable role in influencing sexual behaviour.
18 ral cortex that may contribute to compulsive sexual behaviour.
19 wledge of HIV was associated with less risky sexual behaviour.
20 structural factors that contribute to risky sexual behaviour.
21 ffects of oral contraceptives and changes in sexual behaviour.
22 ews on sociodemographics, substance use, and sexual behaviours.
23 among unmarried adolescents with their risky sexual behaviours.
24 ployment, and per capita household income on sexual behaviours.
25 mptoms, lower risk of overeating and certain sexual behaviours.
26 sex in the previous 3 months and with other sexual behaviours.
27 r across countries, age groups, and reported sexual behaviours.
28 the effect of cash transfers on these risky sexual behaviours.
29 mation while building skills for negotiating sexual behaviours.
30 e identified clusters based on similarity in sexual behaviour, (3) approximated missing cervical canc
34 ial and cultural forces shape young people's sexual behaviour and can help explain why information ca
36 ding progressive weight loss, alterations in sexual behaviour and disturbances in the wake-sleep cycl
37 parameterised and calibrated the model using sexual behaviour and epidemiological data identified fro
40 dependent behaviours: the expression of male sexual behaviour and maternal aggression is substantiall
43 mation on socio-demographic characteristics, sexual behaviour and reported previous use of HCT servic
45 STI screening programmes, we aimed to study sexual behaviour and STI incidence among men who have se
46 y unique opportunity to describe patterns of sexual behaviour and their implications for attempts to
47 gs that help in understanding young people's sexual behaviour and why they might have unsafe sex; pol
48 0) to investigate the frequency of high-risk sexual behaviours and adverse sexual health outcomes in
50 al load among HIV-positive participants, and sexual behaviours and HIV incidence among HIV-negative p
52 ed 12-16 (CSA = 156; comparisons = 304) with sexual behaviours and Internet-initiated victimization a
53 t role in HIV prevention by encouraging safe sexual behaviours and linking HIV-infected clients to an
54 need for vulnerable women to engage in risky sexual behaviours and reducing HIV and sexually transmit
55 ailable, prevention relies on promoting safe sexual behaviours and reducing STI-associated stigma, wh
56 socio-demographic characteristics, reported sexual behaviours and sexually transmitted infections (S
57 entify the association between various risky sexual behaviours and suicidal thoughts among unmarried
58 socio-demographic characteristics, reported sexual behaviours and with HIV and other STIs were estim
59 rEP (HR 0.51, 95% CI 0.26-1.01, adjusted for sexual behaviours), and 3.9 infections per 100 person-ye
60 anhood and maternal HIV status, (2) reported sexual behaviour, and (3) reporting recurring sickness o
61 disorder, binge eating disorder, compulsive sexual behaviour, and compulsive shopping occur in about
62 assessed gender identity, sociodemographics, sexual behaviour, and HIV prevention and care uptake, by
63 sen-Gill survival methods, adjusted for age, sexual behaviour, and plasma HIV RNA levels of the HIV-i
64 that pathogen infection can affect same-sex sexual behaviour, and suggest that the impact of such be
65 omic factors, substance use, depression, and sexual behaviours, and whether they explained ethnic var
66 shared neurons that function in circuits for sexual behaviour are sexually dimorphic in structure and
68 re are concerns MMC might prompt higher-risk sexual behaviours because of lower self-perceived risk o
70 in IVP were likely to reflect differences in sexual behaviour between populations, and may warrant di
71 transmitted infections associated with their sexual behaviour, but also because of internalisation of
75 e maintained by selection for indiscriminate sexual behaviour, by showing that indiscriminate mating
76 al interventions that do not directly target sexual behaviour change can be important components of H
77 LSIL regression and HPV status at baseline, sexual behaviour, contraceptive use, substance or cigare
78 n this paper we present original analyses of sexual behaviour data from 59 countries for which they w
79 longitudinal features and evaluate it using sexual behaviour data from the last 20 years from over 3
84 ing the idea that divergence in courtship or sexual behaviour drives rapid speciation in animals.
85 factors surrounding HIV prevention, such as sexual behaviour, drug use, and gender equalities, count
86 at 'heterosexual' or exclusive different-sex sexual behaviour (DSB) is the baseline condition for ani
89 , parameterising it with the latest data for sexual behaviour (from National Survey of Sexual Attitud
91 SM population in England, parameterized with sexual behaviour, GUM attendance, HPV prevalence, HIV pr
92 ty to control for the confounding effects of sexual behaviour have exaggerated the apparent risk.
93 olence victimisation, violence perpetration, sexual behaviour, HIV testing and services, violence ser
94 Footprinting, to approximate missing data on sexual behaviour, human papillomavirus (HPV) prevalence,
95 he domains of drinking, smoking, driving and sexual behaviour in a European sample from the UK Bioban
96 ual competition, as flies plastically adjust sexual behaviour in a manner consistent with kin-selecti
99 ified binary labelling and classification of sexual behaviour in dementia as appropriate or inappropr
102 We used data from a socio-centric study of sexual behaviour in Malawi to quantify the age-mixing pa
104 s genes, attenuates development and inhibits sexual behaviour in non-optimal food, the synthetic CeMM
105 ring HIV on the basis of their self-reported sexual behaviour in the past 12 weeks or their recent hi
106 K and US samples, the societal regulation of sexual behaviour in these populations, the difficulty of
107 mong young people aged 15-24 years, changing sexual behaviour in this group will be crucial in tackli
111 er) are at high risk of acquiring HIV due to sexual behaviours, injection drug use, social factors, a
117 ived less attention, although indiscriminate sexual behaviour may be the ancestral mode of sexual rep
119 alcohol misuse (especially in girls), risky sexual behaviour, obesity, and criminal behaviour, which
121 oss of ESP22 production results in increased sexual behaviour of adult males towards juveniles, and s
124 acquiring HIV as determined by self-reported sexual behaviour or recent sexually transmitted infectio
125 hether these clusters enhance predictions of sexual behaviour or sexually transmitted diseases (STIs)
126 ng of sensitive information, specifically of sexual behaviours or history associated with mpox risk,
127 individuals who only engage in opposite-sex sexual behaviour (OSB individuals), confer a mating adva
128 We found little evidence of any change in sexual behaviour owing to the PopART interventions, and
129 eeded to address the broader determinants of sexual behaviour, particularly those that relate to the
131 gene, has been found to regulate Drosophila sexual behaviour, probably via its action in a small sub
133 At study visits, data collection included sexual behaviour questionnaires, HIV testing (HIV-negati
135 factors for sexually transmitted infections, sexual behaviour, signs and symptoms on first presentati
136 universal HIV testing and treatment, changed sexual behaviour; specifically, we investigated whether
140 s social desirability bias for self-reported sexual behaviour; STIs were diagnosed in some self-repor
142 ure prophylaxis (PrEP) may encourage riskier sexual behaviours that undermine the protection afforded
144 at majority of cancers that are unrelated to sexual behaviour, there will be nothing even at the popu
145 -1 can relax diet-induced inhibition of male sexual behaviour, thus indicating that a single regulato
146 ed genomic data with detailed information on sexual behaviour to define the extent of transmission ac
147 w robust evidence suggests women adopt risky sexual behaviours to cope with economic shocks, the sudd
148 g behavioural sequelae (e.g., smoking, risky sexual behaviour) to predict inflammation, lending suppo
150 model to historical data for HIV prevalence, sexual behaviours, treatment scale-up, and demographics.
151 o have sex with men in the SHCS with similar sexual behaviour up to May 2017, and apply regression to
152 g measures could lead to reductions in risky sexual behaviour (up to 1.19 times increase in new HIV i
153 llected information on sociodemographics and sexual behaviours using questionnaires administered at e
156 fting the lens through which we study animal sexual behaviour, we can more fruitfully examine the evo
157 use, chemsex use, and measures of high-risk sexual behaviour were strongly associated with incident
158 ce that HIV-negative people with higher risk sexual behaviours were most likely to repeat test, which
159 s mainly social and economic determinants of sexual behaviour, which have implications for interventi
160 compulsive eating, shopping, or disinhibited sexual behaviours, which can have a severe impact on the