Authors
Megan L Sawatsky, Sofija Lavrinsek, Samantha J Dawson, Martin L Lalumière
Publication date
2020/12/1
Journal
The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality
Volume
29
Issue
3
Pages
339-353
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Description
Women’s genital responses measured with a vaginal photoplethysmograph (VPP) demonstrate relatively low cue-specificity for gender/sex cues—the difference in genital responses between sexual stimuli with male or female content is relatively small compared to that of men. Cue-specificity for gender/sex cues is particularly low for androphilic women. It is common practice to compare responses to sexual stimuli (typically 60–120 s film clips) using a mean or peak (highest) value. This approach overlooks the continuous and dynamic nature of sexual responding during a stimulus. Recent results suggest that cue-specificity of genital response may increase throughout the duration of a sexual stimulus. We tested this possibility in a sample of 18 androphilic women. Sexual stimuli consisted of 240 s audiovisual film clips depicting male and/or female partnered sex or solitary masturbation. Gender/sex cue-specificity …
Total citations
20212022202311
Scholar articles
ML Sawatsky, S Lavrinsek, SJ Dawson, ML Lalumière - The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality, 2020