Initial Orienting Towards Sexually Relevant Stimuli: Preliminary Evidence from Eye Movement Measures

2012 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Initial Orienting Towards Sexually Relevant Stimuli: Preliminary Evidence from Eye Movement Measures​
Fromberger, P. ; Jordan, K. ; von Herder, J.; Steinkrauss, H.; Nemetschek, R.; Stolpmann, G.   & Müller, J. L. ​ (2012) 
Archives of Sexual Behavior41(4) pp. 919​-928​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-011-9816-3 

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Authors
Fromberger, Peter ; Jordan, Kirsten ; von Herder, Jakob; Steinkrauss, Henrike; Nemetschek, Rebekka; Stolpmann, Georg ; Müller, Jürgen Leo 
Abstract
It has been proposed that sexual stimuli will be processed in a comparable manner to other evolutionarily meaningful stimuli (such as spiders or snakes) and therefore elicit an attentional bias and more attentional engagement (Spiering and Everaerd, In E. Janssen (Ed.), The psychophysiology of sex (pp. 166-183). Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007). To investigate early and late attentional processes while looking at sexual stimuli, heterosexual men (n = 12) viewed pairs of sexually preferred (images of women) and sexually non-preferred images (images of girls, boys or men), while eye movements were measured. Early attentional processing (initial orienting) was assessed by the number of first fixations and late attentional processing (maintenance of attention) was assessed by relative fixation time. Results showed that relative fixation time was significantly longer for sexually preferred stimuli than for sexually non-preferred stimuli. Furthermore, the first fixation was more often directed towards the preferred sexual stimulus, when simultaneously presented with a non-sexually preferred stimulus. Thus, the current study showed for the first time an attentional bias to sexually relevant stimuli when presented simultaneously with sexually irrelevant pictures. This finding, along with the discovery that heterosexual men maintained their attention to sexually relevant stimuli, highlights the importance of investigating early and late attentional processes while viewing sexual stimuli. Furthermore, the current study showed that sexually relevant stimuli are favored by the human attentional system.
Issue Date
2012
Journal
Archives of Sexual Behavior 
ISSN
0004-0002
Language
English
Notes
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.

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