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ARTICLES

Gender-Specificity of Women's and Men's Self-Reported Attention to Sexual Stimuli

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Abstract

Men's sexual arousal is largely dependent on the actor's gender in a sexual stimulus (gender-specific), whereas for women, particularly androphilic women, arousal is less dependent on gender (gender-nonspecific). According to information-processing models of sexual response, sexual arousal requires that attention be directed toward sexual cues. We evaluated whether men's and women's self-reported attention to sexual stimuli of men or women were consistent with genital responses and self-reported arousal. We presented gynephilic men (n = 21) and women (n = 22) and androphilic men (n = 16) and women (n = 33) with audiovisual stimuli depicting men or women engaged in sexual activities. Genital responses were continuously recorded and, following each stimulus, participants reported the amount of attention paid to the video and feelings of sexual arousal. Self-reported attention was gender-specific for men and gender-nonspecific for women, and generally mirrored genital responses and self-reported arousal. Gender-specificity of genital responses significantly predicted gender-specificity of self-reported arousal; however, for men only, this effect was significantly mediated by gender-specificity of self-reported attention. Gender differences in gender-specificity of sexual arousal may be partially accounted for by differences in gender-specificity of self-reported attention, although attention may play a greater role in men's sexual arousal than women's.

We thank Amanda Timmers and Katrina Bouchard for their assistance with participant recruitment, data collection, data entry, and data preparation. We also thank Samantha Dawson, Michael Seto, and Kelly Suschinsky for their thoughtful suggestions on an earlier version of the article.

Notes

1The within-subject correlation analysis included the neutral stimuli and the male-female intercourse stimuli. These stimuli were excluded from the other analyses to allow an examination of gender-specificity.

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