The present study
investigated the specificity of sexual appraisal processes by making a
distinction between implicit and explicit appraisals and
between the affective (liking) and motivational (wanting) valence of sexual
stimuli. These appraisals are
assumed to diverge between men and women, depending on the context in which the
sexual stimulus is encountered.
Using an Implicit Association Test, explicit
ratings, and film clips to prime a sexual, romantic or neutral motivational
context, we investigated whether liking and wanting of sexual stimuli differed
at the implicit and explicit level, differed between men and women, and were
differentially sensitive to context manipulations.
Results showed that, at the
implicit level, women wanted more sex after
being primed with romantic mood whereas men showed the least wanting of sex in
the romantic condition. At the explicit level, men reported greater liking and
wanting of sex than
women, independently of context.
We also found that women's (self-reported)
sexual behavior was best predicted by the incentive salience of sexual stimuli
whereas men's sexual behavior was more closely related to the hedonic qualities
of sexual stimuli.
Results were discussed in relation to an
emotion-motivational account of sexual functioning.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/dIIKTo
By: Dewitte M1.
- 1Department of Experimental, Clinical, and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium, marieke.dewitte@maastrichtuniversity.nl.
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