What percent homosexual am i

Type most likely to be Woman loving woman, Gay, or Bisexual

Seymour said:

Actually, looking at it in more detail, the number of profiles per type vs the MBTI (US) National Representative sample is pretty different for men. For example, there are times as high a percentage of INFJs as were in the national sample, but only times as many ESFJs as one would expect. Is this because of bias in OkCupid self-selection, or some other factor? Hard to tell.

Still, if we multiplied out the gay male percentage per type (from OkCupid data) times the percentage of population per type from the exemplary sample, we'd get (for queer men of a given type as a percentage of the overall population):

ESFJ: %
ESTJ: %
ISTJ: %
ISFJ: %
ESFP: %
ENFP: %
ESTP: %
ISFP: %
INFP: %
ISTP: %
INTJ: %
ENFJ: %
ENTJ: %
INTP: %
ENTP: %
ISTP: %
INFJ: %

Which seems a little truer to life. SFJs still are very high (with ESFJs being the most usual type for gay men), but TJs fill the #2 and #3 slot.

Click to expand


See I wonder how much of this is stereotypes and self report without any knowledg

Do gays have a boost in admission?

It's hard to narrate. I think it comes down to who is reading your application. I think Elite schools, especially some Ivys are pro-LGBTQ applicants but others perhaps can't give them the environment they're seeking. For instance, I would ponder it would be challenging to be at Dartmouth or Cornell because 1/2 of the social life revolves around CIS White Greek Life (frats and sororities).

But if you are attending Columbia, then you are in the middle of the most exciting town in the nature where you can find support systems both on campus and off. The Columbia queer alliance is the oldest LGBTQ club in America ( founded).

With regards to other top schools, I think it would be hard to be an "out" LGBTQ student at Notre Dame, Georgetown, and Boston College since they are all Jesuit Catholic Institutions. And anywhere in the South, like Wash U, Vanderbilt, Duke, UVA, seems more problematic than USC, UCLA, UC Berkeley, Stanford. Being a lgbtq+ student at a top Liberal Arts college like Swarthmore, Williams, Amherst, Pomona

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LGBT Identification in U.S. Ticks Up to %

Story Highlights

  • LGBT identification up from % in
  • One in five Gen Z adults recognize as LGBT
  • Bisexual identification is most common

Learn more in Gallup’s LGBTQ+ update.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The percentage of U.S. adults who self-identify as lesbian, gay, double attraction, transgender or something other than heterosexual has increased to a new tall of %, which is double the percentage from , when Gallup first measured it.

Gallup asks Americans whether they personally determine as straight or heterosexual, lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender as part of the demographic information it collects on all U.S. telephone surveys. Respondents can also volunteer any other sexual orientation or gender identity they prefer. In addition to the % of U.S. adults who consider themselves to be an LGBT identity, % say they are linear or heterosexual, and % do not offer an opinion. The results are based on aggregated numbers, encompassing interviews with more than 12, U.S. adults.

Line graph. Americans' Self-Identification as Lesbian, Gay,