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Most surveys, to my suprise, are non-bonepressed. They give directions such as “measure from the tip of the penis to the point where the penis contacts the body,” etc. That would clearly indicate NBP.
The problem is that NONE of the self-report surveys that I’ve seen give EXPLICIT instructions (i.e. “Be sure to press the ruler very firmly into fat pad”, OR “Be sure NOT TO press the ruler into fat pad”), and thus leave a lot of room for individual interpretation.
Because of this imprecise wording, I think it’s clear that the numbers reported in all of these surveys are a mixture of BP, NBP, and fudged numbers. Just as a self-esteem preserving measure, it seems likely that most guys would be prone to BP unless instructed explicitly NOT TO. I also think that most guys probably rounded up to the nearest 1/4” increment, rather than down.
It would be nice if someone would do a well controlled survey. All the studies I’ve seen have been very poorly implemented.
The doctor/nurse measured studies are not a lot better. I think such studies are just as likely to underestimate size, as the self-report studies are to over-estimate, because they probably measure a lot of sub-par erections. I doubt many guys could produce a 100% erection for a clinician to measure, unless really hot nurses were giving the guys handjobs and stopping to measure when they looked ready to blow. Somehow I doubt any of the surveys were conducted that way, LOL. I think I read that one doctor injected patients with an erection producing drug, to counter this effect, but he had too small of a sample size, and didn’t state if he measured BP, or NBP.
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I agree that less than 8% were make the top in BOTH dimensions. It was not presented that way. I simply looked at some numbers in each category - girth & length, respectively - and found the top 8% in each.
I know. It looks like you were quoting Kinsey data. I’ve only seen his data presented in charts summarizing each dimension independently, BUT I’ll bet that the raw data is preserved somewhere (i.e. Subject A: L5.75, G5.0, Subject B: L6.5, G5.25…). If so, it could be reinterpreted to chart average volume. I think this probably applies to the other studies as well. Unfortunately, I don’t think any of the studies have released the raw data.