Regarding sexual addiction, Coleman has said, "I think the term 'addiction' is overused and implies that all behavioral excesses can be explained by some similar mechanism. What we know about alcohol and drug addictions cannot simply be transferred to other behavioral excesses. Sex is a basic appetitive drive that for some people becomes out of balance for a variety of reasons. For some it is a problem of impulse control. For others it is more like an obsession. For others, it is like a compulsion. And for others, it is a part of their personality structure and has nothing to do with impulse control, obsessions, or compulsions."[6]
Publications
Some of his significant papers are:
Coleman, E. "Developmental Stages of the Coming Out Process." Journal of Homosexuality 7(2/3):31—43, 1981/82.
Coleman, E. "Bisexual Women and Lesbians in Heterosexual Marriage." Journal of Homosexuality 11:87-113, 1985.
Coleman, E. "Bisexuality: Challenging Our Understanding of Human Sexuality and Sexual Orientation." In Shelp. E.E. (ed.). Sexuality and Medicine, Vol. 1. pp. 225–242. New York: Reidel Publishing, 1987.
Coleman, E. and Bockting, W. O. ""Heterosexual" Prior to Sex Reassignment – "Homosexual" Afterwards: A Case Study of a Female-to-Male Transsexual." Archives of Sexual Behavior 1(2): 69–82, 1988.
Coleman, E. and Bockting, W. O. "A Comment on the Concept of Transhomosexuality, or the Dissociation of the Meaning." Archives of Sexual Behavior 20(4): 419–21, 1991.
Coleman, E., Bockting, W. O. and Gooren, L. "Homosexual and Bisexual Identity in Sex-Reassigned Female to Male Transsexuals." Archives of Sexual Behavior 22(1): 37–50, 1993.
^ abc"Eli Coleman, PhD". University of Minnesota Faculty Directory. 2023. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
^"Chair in Sexual Health". Eli Coleman Institute for Sexual and Gender Health. University of Minnesota. 6 June 2024. Archived from the original on 8 April 2005. Retrieved 6 June 2024.