Visual Attention to Erotic Images in Women Reporting Pain with Intercourse
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 43-52
ISSN: 1559-8519
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In: The Journal of sex research, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 43-52
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 43, Heft 2, S. 136-143
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: Journal of bisexuality, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 319-345
ISSN: 1529-9724
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 52, Heft 3, S. 327-337
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: The Journal of sex research, Band 51, Heft 3, S. 303-315
ISSN: 1559-8519
In: Sexual abuse: official journal of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers (ATSA), Band 29, Heft 5, S. 500-514
ISSN: 1573-286X
Adult men's height results from an interaction among positive and negative influences, including genetic predisposition, conditions in utero, and influences during early development such as nutritional quality, pathogen exposure, and socioeconomic status. Decreased height, reflected specifically as a decreased leg length, is strongly associated with increased risk of poorer health outcomes. Although prior research has repeatedly shown that pedophiles are shorter than nonpedophiles, the largest study to date relied on self-reported height. In the present study, pedophiles demonstrated reduced measured height and reduced leg length as compared with teleiophiles. Given the prenatal and early childhood origins of height, these findings contribute additional evidence to a biological, developmental origin of pedophilia. In addition, the magnitude of this height difference was substantially larger than that found in children exposed to a variety of early environmental stressors, but similar to that seen in other biologically based neurodevelopmental disorders.
In: Sexual abuse: official journal of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers (ATSA), Band 22, Heft 3, S. 279-289
ISSN: 1573-286X
Phallometric assessments of single-victim sexual offenders against children have suggested that only about 50% of these men are more attracted to children than they are to adults. This has raised the question of what motivates the other 50% of men to approach young girls for sex. Freund et al. showed that gynephilic men (i.e., men preferentially attracted to adult women) evidenced greater arousal to images of prepubescent girls than to images of males of any age or to nonerotic images, arguing that gynephilic men may approach prepubescent girls as a "surrogate" for their preferred erotic targets (i.e., adult women). One might argue that these phallometric results are artifactual, given that they were obtained in a time period during which images of nudity were far less common than they are today (thus any female nudity might have elicited arousal). To address this issue, the authors examined the sexual arousal patterns of 214 contemporary men who, based on self-report, offense history, and phallometric responses, were purely gynephilic. Results showed the "classical control profile": the greatest arousal to adult women, systematically decreasing arousal as the female stimuli became younger, and essentially no arousal to any age categories of males or to neutral (nonerotic) stimuli. Arousal to both pubescent and prepubescent girls was significantly greater than to neutral stimuli ( p < .001 for both). Thus, Freund et al.'s results still appear to be valid, and the explanation for child molesting that they suggest still seems to be feasible.
In: Sexual abuse: official journal of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers (ATSA), Band 22, Heft 1, S. 42-57
ISSN: 1573-286X
Phallometric testing is widely considered the best psychophysiological procedure for assessing erotic preferences in men. Researchers have differed, however, on the necessity of setting some minimum criterion of penile response for ascertaining the interpretability of a phallometric test result. Proponents of a minimum criterion have generally based their view on the intuitive notion that "more is better" rather than any formal demonstration of this. The present study was conducted to investigate whether there is any empirical evidence for this intuitive notion, by examining the relation between magnitude of penile response and the agreement in diagnoses obtained in two test sessions using different laboratory stimuli. The results showed that examinees with inconsistent diagnoses responded less on both tests and that examinees with inconsistent diagnoses responded less on the second test after controlling for their response on the first test. Results also indicated that at response levels less than 1 cm3, diagnostic consistency was no better than chance, supporting the establishment of a minimum response level criterion.