Research addressing relationships between alcohol and human sexuality has proliferated, due in part to efforts to characterize
alcohol’s role in HIV risk behavior. This study provides a descriptive review of the alcohol–sexuality literature, using abstracts
from 264 identified studies to estimate changes in publication activity, target populations, and the prevalence of HIV-related
studies over time. We also examine methodological trends by estimating the prevalence of experimental vs. non-experimental
studies. Findings show considerable increases in research activity and diversity of populations studied since the mid-1980’s
and highlight the emergence of HIV-related studies as a focal point of alcohol–sexuality research efforts. Results also demonstrate
a substantial decline in the proportion of studies utilizing experimental methods, in part because of frequent use of non-experimental
approaches in studies of alcohol and HIV risk behavior. We discuss implications and review the role of experiments in evaluating
causal relationships between alcohol and sexual risk behavior.
Keywords Alcohol - Sexuality - HIV - AIDS - Experimental design