| Literature DB >> 22984465 |
Charmaine Borg1, Peter J de Jong.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sex and disgust are basic, evolutionary relevant functions that are often construed as paradoxical. In general the stimuli involved in sexual encounters are, at least out of context strongly perceived to hold high disgust qualities. Saliva, sweat, semen and body odours are among the strongest disgust elicitors. This results in the intriguing question of how people succeed in having pleasurable sex at all. One possible explanation could be that sexual engagement temporarily reduces the disgust eliciting properties of particular stimuli or that sexual engagement might weaken the hesitation to actually approach these stimuli.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22984465 PMCID: PMC3440388 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Subjective evaluation for each dimension as a function of stimulus type.
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| Erotic | Positive arousal | Neutral |
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| 4.3 (1.9)a, x | 8.5 (1.7)b, y | 0.1 (0.4)c |
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| 9.4 (1.2)b, z | 2.1 (1.6)c, x | 0.2 (0.4)c |
M(SD) M, mean, SD, standard deviation. Stimulus type includes the three film categories (erotic, positive arousal and neutral film) and the dimension includes the subjective elicited mood (sexual arousal, and general arousal). Different letters in superscript (a/b/c/d) indicate significant difference between stimulus categories within a dimension ( <.025). For instance, the ‘a’ on the erotic and the ‘b’ on positive arousing film clip on the first row indicates that they do differ significantly from each other on the dimension of general arousal. The 2nd letter (x) applies to relevant comparisons across columns. For instance the ‘x’ of the erotic film clip, on the dimension of sexual arousal with the ‘x’ on positive arousing film on the dimension of general arousal indicates that these two do not differ significantly from each other ( >.025).
Perceived level of elicited disgust as a function of group, stimulus type and time of measurement (before vs. after task).
| Sex related stimuli | Non-sex related stimuli | |||
| Group |
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| Neutral | 6.9 (1.4) | 6.8 (1.8) | 6.6 (1.3) | 7.1 (1.5) |
| Sexual arousal | 5.4 (1.9) | 5.7 (1.8) | 5.6 (1.9) | 6.1 (1.5) |
| Positive arousal | 6.6 (1.8) | 6.8 (2.1) | 5.8 (2.1) | 6.7 (2.9) |
M(SD) M, means and (SD) standard deviations of the elicited disgust measured on a VAS per group.
Impact of sexual arousal on elicited feelings of disgust per disgust subtypes.
| Disgust subtypes | ||||
| Group |
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|
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| Neutral | 7.4 (1.9) | 5.2 (1.7) | 7.7 (1.5) | 6.2 (1.6) |
| Sexualarousal | 6.0 (2.3) | 4.4 (1.7) | 6.4 (2.1) | 5.2 (2.2) |
| Positivearousal | 6.6 (2.3) | 5.2 (1.8) | 6.7 (2.3) | 5.9 (2.2) |
| Totalscore | 6.7 (2.2) | 4.9 (1.8) | 6.9 (2.0) | 5.8 (2.1) |
M(SD) M, means and (SD) standard deviations of elicited disgust per subtype as a function of group as measured on a VAS. Total score is the mean of the 3 groups per each disgust subtype.
Figure 1Testing mediation effects of self-reported disgust.
Legend, [A] illustrates the experimental manipulation (sexual arousal group, versus both neutral and positive arousal group); [C] represents the Behavioural tasks and [B] show the subjective disgust as measured on the visual analogue scale (VAS); β is the beta value and p is the statistical significance level.