Homophobia Is Related to a Low Interest in Sexuality in General: An Analysis of Pupillometric Evoked Responses

A recent study by Cheval et al (J Sex Med 2016;13:825–834) found that individuals high in homophobia look significantly less long at sex-related photographs, regardless of their nature (ie, homosexual or heterosexual). Because viewing time is under some conscious control, this result could indicate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sexual medicine 2016-10, Vol.13 (10), p.1539-1545
Hauptverfasser: Cheval, Boris, Grob, Emmanuelle, Chanal, Julien, Ghisletta, Paolo, Bianchi-Demicheli, Francesco, Radel, Remi
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container_end_page 1545
container_issue 10
container_start_page 1539
container_title Journal of sexual medicine
container_volume 13
creator Cheval, Boris
Grob, Emmanuelle
Chanal, Julien
Ghisletta, Paolo
Bianchi-Demicheli, Francesco
Radel, Remi
description A recent study by Cheval et al (J Sex Med 2016;13:825–834) found that individuals high in homophobia look significantly less long at sex-related photographs, regardless of their nature (ie, homosexual or heterosexual). Because viewing time is under some conscious control, this result could indicate that individuals high in homophobia have a low sexual interest in any sexual stimuli or are consciously motivated to avoid sexual material in line with their conscious values. To determine the mechanism underlying shorter viewing time of sex-related photographs in individuals high in homophobia using pupil dilatation, which is considered a spontaneous, unconscious, and uncontrollable index of sexual interest. Heterosexual men (N = 36) completed a questionnaire assessing their level of homo-negativity and then performed a picture-viewing task with simultaneous eye-tracking recording to assess their pupillary responses to the presentation of sexually related or neutral photographs. Non-linear mixed models were carried out to fit the individual non-linear trajectories of pupillary reaction. Different parameters were obtained including the final asymptote of the pupillary response. Results showed that the final pupil size of men high in homophobia increased significantly less to the presentation of sex-related images (ie, heterosexual and homosexual) than the pupil size of men low in homophobia. In contrast, no significant difference in the final pupil size reaction toward homosexual images (vs heterosexual images) emerged between men high and men low in homophobia. Theoretically, these findings reinforce the necessity to consider that homophobia might reflect concerns about sexuality in general and not homosexuality in particular.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jsxm.2016.07.013
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Because viewing time is under some conscious control, this result could indicate that individuals high in homophobia have a low sexual interest in any sexual stimuli or are consciously motivated to avoid sexual material in line with their conscious values. To determine the mechanism underlying shorter viewing time of sex-related photographs in individuals high in homophobia using pupil dilatation, which is considered a spontaneous, unconscious, and uncontrollable index of sexual interest. Heterosexual men (N = 36) completed a questionnaire assessing their level of homo-negativity and then performed a picture-viewing task with simultaneous eye-tracking recording to assess their pupillary responses to the presentation of sexually related or neutral photographs. Non-linear mixed models were carried out to fit the individual non-linear trajectories of pupillary reaction. Different parameters were obtained including the final asymptote of the pupillary response. Results showed that the final pupil size of men high in homophobia increased significantly less to the presentation of sex-related images (ie, heterosexual and homosexual) than the pupil size of men low in homophobia. In contrast, no significant difference in the final pupil size reaction toward homosexual images (vs heterosexual images) emerged between men high and men low in homophobia. 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source MEDLINE; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Adult
Arousal - physiology
Eye Tracking
Female
Heterosexuality - physiology
Homophobia
Humans
Libido - physiology
Male
Pupil - physiology
Pupillary Responses
Recognition (Psychology) - physiology
Sexual Behavior - physiology
Sexual Interest
Surveys and Questionnaires
Visual Perception
title Homophobia Is Related to a Low Interest in Sexuality in General: An Analysis of Pupillometric Evoked Responses
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