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Sexual content induced delay : a re-examination investigating relation to sexual desire

journal contribution
posted on 2004-08-01, 00:00 authored by H Conaglen
This article reports the utility of an information processing approach to examine whether there is a relationship between sexual content induced delay and levels of sexual desire as determined by self-report questionnaires. We tested this idea using a partial replication of the J. H. Geer and H. S. Bellard (1996) protocol demonstrating sexual content induced delay (SCID) in responding to sexual versus neutral words. In addition, the experiment examined whether SCID was different in people with varying levels of sexual desire. It was hypothesized that persons with low levels of sexual desire might respond more slowly to sexual word cues than others. Words with equal frequency of usage and similar word length were chosen from among those used in the Geer and Bellard study. The experiment was conducted with 171 volunteers who completed sexual desire questionnaires, lexical decision making tasks, and word ratings. The SCID effect was demonstrated by both men and women in the study with no significant variation between the sexes. In accordance with prediction, it was found that persons with lower levels of sexual desire responded more slowly to sexual stimuli than other participants, and rated sexual words as less familiar, less acceptable, and less positive emotionally to them. These findings have implications for understanding how emotional content contributes to SCID. They also suggest that further exploration of these ideas, perhaps using other stimulus modalities, may be helpful in advancing understanding of responses to sexual cues, and the potential implications that may have in better understanding sexual desire.

History

Journal

Archives of sexual behavior

Volume

33

Issue

4

Pagination

359 - 367

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Location

Delft, Netherlands

ISSN

0004-0002

eISSN

1573-2800

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Plenum Publishing Corporation

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