Authors
Megan L Sawatsky, Kelly D Suschinsky, Sofija Lavrinsek, Meredith L Chivers, Martin L Lalumière
Publication date
2021/11
Journal
Archives of Sexual Behavior
Volume
50
Issue
8
Pages
3865-3888
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Forty years ago, researchers documented changes in vascular and muscular activity within the anal canal of women and men who engaged in sexual self-stimulation. Vascular changes were assessed using a photoplethysmograph that aimed to detect changes in pelvic vasocongestion. An important advantage of detecting sexual response within the anal canal is that the device, its anatomical placement, and the data output are identical for women and men, therefore facilitating gender comparisons of response patterns. In this study, the vaginal photoplethysmograph (VPP), the most common measure of genital response in women, was administered intra-anally as an anal photoplethysmograph (APG) to examine its validity and sensitivity as an indicator of sexual response. The final sample comprised 20 women and 20 men who were exposed to 12, 90-s sexual and nonsexual film clips while their APG responses …
Total citations
20202021202220232024121
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