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HERO ID
3980384
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
The relationship between sexual concordance and interoception in anxious and nonanxious women
Author(s)
Suschinsky, KD; Lalumière, ML
Year
2014
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Journal of Sexual Medicine
ISSN:
1743-6095
EISSN:
1743-6109
Volume
11
Issue
4
Page Numbers
942-955
Language
English
PMID
23859298
DOI
10.1111/jsm.12250
Abstract
INTRODUCTION:
Sexual concordance refers to the association between physiological and self-reported sexual arousal. Women typically exhibit lower sexual concordance scores than men. There is also a sex difference in interoception--awareness of (nonsexual) physiological states or responses--such that women, compared with men, tend to be less aware of and less accurate at detecting changes in their physiological responses. Women with anxiety problems tend to have better interoceptive abilities than nonanxious women.
AIM:
To investigate whether women's lower sexual concordance is associated with interoception using a sample likely to show high variation in interoceptive abilities.
METHOD:
Sixteen anxious and 15 nonanxious women were presented with twelve 90 seconds sexual and nonsexual film clips while their genital response, heart rate, and respiration rate were measured. A heartbeat mental tracking task was also employed.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Genital response was measured with a vaginal photoplethysmograph. Heart rate was measured with an electrocardiogram and respiration rate with a thermistor. Participants estimated their physiological responses after each film. A mental tracking task was also used to assess participants' awareness of heart rate. Within-subject correlations were computed for each physiological/self-reported response combination.
RESULTS:
Overall, sexual concordance (i.e., the correlation between genital responses and perceptions of genital response) was not significantly associated with heart rate awareness or respiration rate awareness. Anxious women did not exhibit significantly higher sexual concordance or heart rate awareness than nonanxious women; the nonanxious women actually exhibited higher respiration rate awareness.
CONCLUSION:
The results suggest that sexual concordance may be a distinct phenomenon from interoception and in need of its own explanation.
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Exposure Factors Handbook (Post 2011)
Pubmed (August 2017)
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