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MEDIA CONTACT: Pat
Vaughan Tremmel at (847) 491-4892 or p-tremmel@northwestern.edu
June 12, 2003
Study on Differences in Female, Male Sexuality
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Three decades of research on men’s sexual
arousal show patterns that clearly track sexual orientation -- gay
men overwhelmingly become sexually aroused by images of men and heterosexual
men by images of women. In other words, men’s sexual arousal
patterns seem obvious.
But a new Northwestern University study boosts the relatively limited
research on women’s sexuality with a surprisingly different
finding regarding women’s sexual arousal.
In contrast to men, both heterosexual and lesbian women tend to become
sexually aroused by both male and female erotica, and, thus, have
a bisexual arousal pattern.
“These findings likely represent a fundamental difference between
men’s and women’s brains and have important implications
for understanding how sexual orientation development differs between
men and women,” said J. Michael Bailey, professor and chair
of psychology at Northwestern and senior researcher of the study “A
Sex Difference in the Specificity of Sexual Arousal.” The study
is forthcoming in the journal Psychological Science.
Bailey’s main research focus has been on the genetics and environment
of sexual orientation, and he is one of the principal investigators
of a widely cited study that concludes that genes influence male
homosexuality.
As in many areas of sexuality, research on women’s sexual arousal
patterns has lagged far behind men’s, but the scant research
on the subject does hint that, compared with men, women’s sexual
arousal patterns may be less tightly connected to their sexual orientation.
The Northwestern study strongly suggests this is true. The Northwestern
researchers measured the psychological and physiological sexual arousal
in homosexual and heterosexual men and women as they watched erotic
films. There were three types of erotic films: those featuring only
men, those featuring only women and those featuring male and female
couples. As with previous research, the researchers found that men
responded consistent with their sexual orientations. In contrast,
both homosexual and heterosexual women showed a bisexual pattern
of psychological as well as genital arousal. That is, heterosexual
women were just as sexually aroused by watching female stimuli as
by watching male stimuli, even though they prefer having sex with
men rather than women.
“In fact, the large majority of women in contemporary Western
societies have sex exclusively with men,” said Meredith Chivers,
a Ph.D. candidate in clinical psychology at Northwestern University
and a
psychology intern at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and
the study’s first author. “But I have long suspected
that women’s sexuality is very different from men’s,
and this study scientifically demonstrates one way this is so.”
The study’s results mesh with current research showing that women’s
sexuality demonstrates increased flexibility relative to men in other areas besides
sexual orientation, according to Chivers.
“Taken together, these results suggest that women’s sexuality differs
from men and emphasize the need for researchers to develop a model of the development
and organization of female sexuality independent from models of male sexuality,” she
said.
The study’s four authors include Bailey and three graduate students in
Northwestern’s psychology department, Chivers, Gerulf Rieger and Elizabeth
Latty.
“Since most women seem capable of sexual arousal to both sexes, why do
they choose
one or the other?” Bailey asked. “Probably for reasons other than
sexual arousal.”
Sexual arousal is the emotional and physical response to sexual stimuli, including
erotica or actual people. It has been known since the early 1960s that homosexual
and heterosexual men respond in specific but opposite ways to sexual stimuli
depicting men and women. Films provoke the greatest sexual response, and films
of men having sex with men or of women having sex with women
provoke the largest differences between homosexual and heterosexual men. That
is because the same-sex films offer clear-cut results, whereas watching heterosexual
sex could be exciting to both homosexual and heterosexual men, but for different
reasons.
Typically, men experience genital arousal and psychological sexual arousal when
they watch films depicting their preferred sex, but not when they watch films
depicting the other sex. Men’s specific pattern of sexual arousal is such
a reliable fact that genital arousal can be used to assess men’s sexual
preferences. Even gay men who deny their own homosexuality will become more sexually
aroused by male sexual stimuli than by female stimuli.
“The fact that women’s sexual arousal patterns are not all predicted
by
their sexual orientations suggests that men’s and women’s minds and
brains are very different,” Bailey said.
To rule out the possibility that the differences between men’s and women’s
genital sexual arousal patterns might be due to the different ways that genital
arousal is measured in men and women, the Northwestern researchers identified
a subset of subjects: postoperative transsexuals who began life as men but had
surgery to construct artificial vaginas.
In a sense, those transsexuals have the brains of men but the genitals of women.
Their psychological and genital arousal patterns matched those of men -- those
who like men were more aroused by male stimuli and those who like women were
more aroused by the female stimuli -- even though their genital arousal was measured
in the same way women’s was.
“This shows that the sex difference that we found is real and almost certainly
due to a sex difference in the brain,” said Bailey.
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