1 / 38

Chapter Two:

Understanding Human Sexuality: Theory and Research. Chapter Two:. Agenda. Distinguish Between Theory and Research Summarize Main Points of Influential Theories Discuss Significant Research Projects Review Research Methodologies. Distinction Between Theory and Research.

Download Presentation

Chapter Two:

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. Understanding Human Sexuality: Theory and Research Chapter Two:

  2. Agenda • Distinguish Between Theory and Research • Summarize Main Points of Influential Theories • Discuss Significant Research Projects • Review Research Methodologies

  3. Distinction Between Theory and Research • Theories are the intellectual structure (assumptions, principles, methods) for understanding sexuality • Research helps answer questions about human sexuality • Many disciplines conduct research in sexuality, varying in the questions asked and scientific approaches taken

  4. Theories of Human Sexuality

  5. Theories About Sexuality • Many theories guide our thoughts about human sexuality • Psychological • Biological • Evolutionary • Sociological • Feminist • Queer • Most theorists utilize multiple perspectives

  6. Psychoanalytic Theory Behavioral Theory Social Learning Theory Cognitive Theory Humanistic Theory Psychological Theories

  7. Psychological: Psychoanalytic Theory • Freud (1856-1939) • Most influential psychological theory of sexuality • Sex drive is a very important life force • Two controversial concepts: • Personality Formation • Psychosexual Development

  8. Fact that Might Only Interest Me • Karen Horney was a psychoanalytic therapist who trained with Freud. • In response to Freud’s assertion that women demonstrated “penis envy”, she suggested that men had “womb envy” because they are preoccupied with sexual intercourse.

  9. Psychological: Behavioral Theory • Only study overt behavior; ignore internal states • Operant conditioning (Skinner) • reinforcement • punishment • Behavior modification – tool to change unwanted behavior • Aversion therapy

  10. Psychological: Social Learning Theory • Bandura • Basis in operant conditioning • Also consider internal events in affecting behavior • Identification and imitation of same-sex parent in development of our gender identity • Peer pressure influence on our sexuality

  11. Psychological: Cognitive Theory • Individual differences in processing information • Behavior is a result of our perceptions and conceptualizations of our environment • Largest sex organ – the brain • We are sexually aroused by what we think is sexually arousing

  12. Psychological: Humanistic Theory • Self-actualization – we try to be the best we can become • Unconditional positive regard allows us to become self-actualized

  13. Biological Theory • Our sexuality is controlled by our physiology, genetics

  14. Evolutionary Theory • Combination of evolution and sociology • Sexuality serves to reproduce • Primary goal is to pass on one’s genes • Double standard

  15. Sociological Theory • Sexual expression varies across societies • Institutions influence rules societies hold regarding the expression of sexuality • Family • Religion • Economy • Medicine • Law • Media

  16. Feminist Theory • Sexology is dominated by white, middle-class, heterosexist attitudes • Sexuality research is based on male sexuality • Social construction of sexuality based on power, historically held by men • Women as passive and submissive • Sexuality used by men to maintain power over women • Lack research on female orgasm, satisfaction

  17. Queer Theory • Heterosexism and homophobia should be resisted • Heterosexism is not the norm, with all else deviant • Sexual categories are cultural constructions that limit and restrain

  18. Class Exercise • Choose any topic associated with human sexuality. • How would the topic be explained from the • Psychological perspective (choose one psychological theory)? • Biological perspective? • Evolutionary perspective? • Sociological perspective? • Feminist Perspective? • Queer Perspective? • Discuss points of • Agreement • Disagreement

  19. Sexuality Research

  20. Recent Sexuality Research • Late 1980s, early 1990s increase in sexuality research • Prompted by HIV/AIDS • Primarily “problem-driven” research, not healthy sexuality • Pressure from conservative groups • Multiple disciplines studying sex has fragmented research

  21. Recent Sexuality Research • Popular media sensationalizes and distorts information • Sexologist – researcher, educator, clinician specializing in sexuality; usually PhD • Researchers feel pressure to research select topics and avoid others • Academic programs specializing in human sexuality; need steady funding

  22. Kinsey Masters & Johnson The Janus Report National Health and Social Life Survey Landmark Research

  23. Kinsey: Large Scale Sexuality Research Begins in the U.S. • Most influential modern sexuality researcher • Atheoretical in the beginning because data on sexuality was lacking • He and 3 colleagues interviewed 18,000 subjects to obtain sexual life histories • Preferred use of 100% sampling • 1947, established the Institute for Sex Research

  24. Kinsey: Large Scale Sexuality Research Begins in the U.S. • 1948: Sexual Behavior in the Human Male • 1953: Sexual Behavior in the Human Female • Found many unacceptable activities to be widely practiced • Controversial work; had funding sources taken away

  25. Sexuality Research in the United States • Masters & Johnson: In 1954, began to study the anatomy and physiology of intercourse in the laboratory • Electrocardiograph • Electromyograph • Penile strain gauges • Photoplethysmographs

  26. Sexuality Research in the United States • Masters & Johnson: Human Sexual Response (1966) • Four stage model • Women may have multiple orgasms • Sexuality stays with us as we age • Masters & Johnson: Human Sexual Inadequacy (1970) • Vaginal orgasms from clitoral stimulation

  27. Sexuality Research in the United States: Homosexuality • Few large-scale studies • Hooker: Early 1950s; professionals could not differentiate gay and straight males • Bell & Weinberg: Homosexualities (1978) • majority of homosexual men and women do not conform to stereotypes • aren’t sexual predators • homosexuals and heterosexuals are similar in intimate relationships

  28. Sexuality Research in the United States • The Janus Report (1993): large survey on sexual behavior in the U.S.; sectioned out regions in the U.S.; not a random sample • National Health and Social Life Survey, Laumann, Gagnon, Michael, & Michaels (1994): Surveyed a representative sample of the U.S. on sexual behaviors and attitudes

  29. Class Exercise • Earlier, I noted that research is primarily “problem-driven” research, noting that there has been limited research about healthy sexuality. • Why do you think there has been more attention to problems than healthy sexuality? • Identify research topics that would be associated with “healthy sexuality.”

  30. Research Methodology

  31. Sex Research Methods and Considerations • Validity – measuring what it is designed to • Reliability – consistency • Generalizability/Random Samples

  32. Sex Research Methods and Considerations • Case study – individual cases explored to form hypotheses • Questionnaire – self-report attitudes, behavior, knowledge • anonymity • Interview – researcher records attitudes, behavior, knowledge • rapport, flexibility, expensive

  33. Sex Research Methods and Considerations • Direct Observation – focus on behaviors • difficult to find subjects in sexuality research; expensive • Participant Observation – researchers monitor within a natural environment • much sexual behavior is in private

  34. Sex Research Methods and Considerations • Experimental Method – establish cause and effect due to increased control • Random assignment • Independent variable – manipulated • Dependent variable – measured • Costly, artificial, results may not relate to the real world; ethical constraints

  35. Sex Research Methods and Considerations • Correlations – describes a relationship between variables • Used when experiments are not possible • Cannot establish cause and effect

  36. Problems and Issues in Sex Research • Ethical Issues – informed consent, confidentiality • Volunteer Bias – there are differences between volunteers and nonvolunteers; can’t generalize • Sampling Problems – samples of convenience (college students); generalizability questioned • Reliability – changes over time; memory

  37. Class Exercise • Earlier you identified topics associated with healthy sexuality. • What methodology (or multiple methodologies) would you use to study this topic? • Are there ethical problems? • How would you recruit participants?

  38. Sex Research in the Future: Beyond Problem-Driven Research • Need for financial support • Congressional and religious opposition • Reliance on pharmaceutical companies for funding • “Scientific underground” • Many unexplored topics within human sexuality • Future direction to understand emotional and relational aspects

More Related