Studies with volunteers in
sexual arousal experiments suggest that women are, on average, physiologically
sexually aroused to both male and female sexual stimuli. Lesbians are the
exception because they tend to be more aroused to their preferred sex than the
other sex, a pattern typically seen in men.
A separate research line suggests
that lesbians are, on average, more masculine than straight women in their
nonsexual behaviors and characteristics. Hence, a common influence could affect
the expression of male-typical sexual and nonsexual traits in some women. By
integrating these research programs, we tested the hypothesis that male-typical
sexual arousal of lesbians relates to their nonsexual masculinity.
Moreover,
the most masculine-behaving lesbians, in particular, could show the most
male-typical sexual responses. Across combined data, Study 1 examined these
patterns in women's genital arousal and self-reports of masculine and feminine
behaviors. Study 2 examined these patterns with another measure of sexual
arousal, pupil dilation to sexual stimuli, and with observer-rated
masculinity-femininity in addition to self-reported masculinity-femininity.
Although both studies confirmed that lesbians were more male-typical in their
sexual arousal and nonsexual characteristics, on average, there were no
indications that these 2 patterns were in any way connected. Thus, women's
sexual responses and nonsexual traits might be masculinized by independent
factors.
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By: Rieger G, Savin-Williams RC, Chivers ML, Bailey JM.
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