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Using the Dual Control Model to Investigate the Relationship Between Mood,Genital, and Self-Reported Sexual Arousal in Men and Women
Authors:Blair Hodgson  Tuuli M Kukkonen  Yitzchak M Binik  Serge Carrier
Institution:1. Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition, College of Social and Applied Human Sciences, University of Guelph;2. Department of Psychology, McGill University;3. Department of Psychology, Sex and Couple Therapy Service, McGill University Health Centre (RVH);4. Department of Surgery, Division of Urology, McGill University Health Centre
Abstract:Recent findings suggest that there is considerable interindividual variability in how mood affects sexual arousal and that the dual control model may be helpful in explaining this variation. The current research investigated whether mood interacted with sexual excitation and inhibition proneness to predict subjective and genital arousal. In this study, 33 participants (18 men; 15 women), ages 18 to 45, attended three laboratory sessions where they completed questionnaires assessing preexisting mood and propensity for sexual excitation and inhibition, then watched a series of neutral and sexually explicit films. Subjective sexual arousal was continuously indicated during each film, while genital temperature was measured using thermographic imaging. Sexual excitation and inhibition interacted with various mood scores to significantly predict both subjective and genital arousal in men and women. Several gender differences were found. For example, vigor scores interacted with sexual excitation proneness to significantly predict genital but not subjective arousal in women, while the same interaction significantly predicted subjective but not genital arousal in men. The findings supported the hypothesis that the dual control model is an important framework in understanding how mood influences both subjective and genital sexual arousal.
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