1 / 21

Sexual Motivation

Sexual Motivation. The Biology of Desire. Hormones and Sexual Response Testosterone is associated with sexual activity Sexual Activity is associated with testosterone Arousal and Orgasm Alfred Kinsey Pioneer of sexual research dispelling myths about women’s sexuality.

benjamin
Download Presentation

Sexual Motivation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sexual Motivation

  2. The Biology of Desire • Hormones and Sexual Response • Testosterone is associated with sexual activity • Sexual Activity is associated with testosterone • Arousal and Orgasm • Alfred Kinsey • Pioneer of sexual research dispelling myths about women’s sexuality. • Women and men are alike in their anatomy and sexuality. • Women have a lesser sexual capacity due to biology

  3. The Biology of Desire II • Arousal and Orgasm (continued) • Masters and Johnson • Confirmed male and female similarities in biology • Identified Four Phases of Human Sexual Response Cycle (see following slides • Excitement • Plateau • Orgasm • Resolution • Women’s capacity for sexual response “infinitely surpassed that of men. • They overestimate women’s capacity while Kinsey underestimated • Debates about biological differences continue today between biological and environmental psychologists

  4. Evolution and Sex • Sex is adaptive to the species survival • Males compete for fertile young females to continue species. • Females try to attach to dominate males with resources, status, and “superior” genes. • Critique of Evolutionary View • After the fact argument of a stereotype • Women have sex even when they aren’t ovulating • What people say and what they do differ • Mate choice is often just proximity and similarity

  5. The Psychology of Desire • Brain as a sex organ • Perception • Many Motives for Sex • Enhancement (emotional satisfaction and pleasure) • Intimacy (emotional closeness with the partner) • Coping (dealing with negative emotions) • Self-affirmation (reassurance) • Partner Approval (desire to please or appease) • Peer Approval (with to impress friends • Extrinsic motives are more associated with high risk sexual behavior • 50% women and 26% men reported consenting to unwanted sex (O’Sullivan & Allgeier, 1998) • Peer pressure, fear of rejection, etc..

  6. Sexual Coercion and Rape • Laumann et. al., 1994 Study • 25% women reported that a man- usually a husband or boyfriend- had forced them to do something sexually that they did not want to. • 3% of men reported they had ever forced a women into a sexual act. • Obviously what many women regard as coercion is not always seen as coercive by men • How do you explain these findings? • What motivates individuals to rape? • Peer approval, anger or desire to dominate, personality traits, sadistic pleasure, etc…

  7. The Culture of Desire • Culture Influences are Sexual Desire • Kissing • Body Parts as Erotic • Joyful or Dirty • How does your culture influence our desire? • Sexual Scripts • Gender Roles- rules that determine proper attitudes and behavior for men and women • Sexual Scripts are sets of implicit rules that specify proper sexual behavior for a person in a given situation, varying with the person’s age, culture, and gender. • What are the sexual scripts of your culture?

  8. Sexual Dysfunction • Definition- Impairment either in the desire for sexual gratification or in the ability to achieve it. • Four Phases of Human Sexual Response • Excitement / Desire • Plateau • Orgasm • Resolution

  9. Sexual Dysfunction: Prevalence • Altogether 45% of men and 55% of women reported some dysfunction during the last year. • Women • 33% report lack of sexual interest • 24% report inability to experience orgasm • Men • 29% reported climaxing to early • 17% reported sexual anxiety • 16% reported lack of sexual interest

  10. Sexual Disorders • Sexual Desire Disorders • Hypoactive, Sexual Aversion • Sexual Arousal Disorders • Male Erectile Disorder- Persistent or recurrent inability to attain, or maintain until completion of the sexual activity, an adequate erection. • Female Sexual Arousal Disorder- Attain or maintain lubrication. • Orgasmic Disorders • Premature Ejaculation- Persistent and recurrent onset of orgasm and ejaculation with minimal sexual stimulation, occurring before, at, or shortly after penetration and before the man wants it to. • Female Orgasmic Disorder- Persistent or recurrent delay in or absence of orgasm following a normal sexual excitement phase. • Sexual Pain Disorders • Vaginismus- involuntary spasms of the musculature of the outer third of the vagina that interferes with sexual intercourse

More Related