“…Over the last three decades, researchers have identified several methodological issues, such as defining the scope of sexually aggressive behavior, and wording and presenting of questions (Abbey et al, 2005; Cook et al, 2011; Koss, 1993; Krahé & Vanwesenbeeck, 2016; Krebs, 2014), which complicate the precise measurement of sexual aggression. Prevalence rates were shown to vary depending on the operational definitions of sexual aggression (see Fedina et al, 2018; Krahé et al, 2014, for reviews), and different instruments presented to the same participants yield different prevalence rates (Anderson et al, 2019a). Several analyses have shown that the use of behaviorally specific, multi-item measures is superior to broad screening questions and single-item measures (Cook et al, 2011; Krahé & Vanwesenbeeck, 2016; Krebs et al, 2017).…”