| Literature DB >> 30671876 |
Geraldine Rodriguez-Nieto1,2, Franziska Emmerling3,4,5, Marieke Dewitte6, Alexander T Sack3,4, Teresa Schuhmann3,4.
Abstract
Sexual behavior is the open manifestation of a complex interplay between psychophysiological mechanisms that either facilitate or inhibit sexual thoughts, desires, and associated behaviors. Whereas sexual excitation has been widely studied, less is known about the impact of inhibitory control mechanisms that enable individuals to refrain from sexual cognition and behavior. The present study examined: (1) the relationship between general and sexual inhibitory mechanisms (as measured through self-reports and computer-based tasks), (2) the relation between sexual inhibitory processes at cognitive and motor-motivational levels and with sexual inhibition as an individual trait, and (3) the predictive value of these parameters on sexual thoughts (cognition) and behavior. We demonstrate that general inhibitory control (i.e., the ability to suppress any preponderant response) and the specific inhibition of sexual responses represent distinct processes that require at least partly different control mechanisms. Similarly, the ability to inhibit sexual visual input and the ability to suppress sexually driven responses seem to be two independent processes. The different inhibitory processes distinctively predicted the frequency of sexual thoughts and sexual behavior. We propose that these different inhibitory mechanisms are at play during different phases of sexual regulation (before and after the generation and unfolding of sexual arousal) and that a specific deficit in one of these processes may underlie the distinctive symptomatology and comorbidity of sexual disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Approach–Avoidance task; General inhibition; Go/No-go task; Priming inhibition; Sexual inhibition
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30671876 PMCID: PMC6373525 DOI: 10.1007/s10508-018-1283-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Sex Behav ISSN: 0004-0002
Fig. 1Negative Affective Priming task (NAP). a Four conditions: In the two priming conditions (sex and non-sex), the content of the distractor in the prime trial matched the content of the target in the probe trial. In the no priming conditions, the content of the distractor in the prime trial was different from the content of the target in the probe trial. b Timeline: example of a Sex Priming and a Sex No Priming trial. The stimuli shown are dummy photographs only used for illustrative purposes
Fig. 2Approach–Avoidance task (AAT). a Sex Approach block: Participants were instructed to approach (pull joystick toward themselves) images with sexual content and to avoid (pull joystick away from themselves) non-sexual photographs. Approach caused an increase, while avoidance caused a decrease in image size. b Sex avoid block: Participants were instructed to avoid images with sexual content and approach images with non-sexual content. The stimuli shown are dummy photographs only used for illustrative purposes
Fig. 3Go/No-go task design
Descriptive and comparative statistics of partnered and single men
| Total | Partnered | Single men | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 24.46 (4.32) | 25.08 (4.46) | 23.93 (4.21) | ns |
| Sexual Excitation Scalea | 50.62 (7.19) | 50.58 (6.37) | 50.64 (7.9) | ns |
| Sexual Inhibition Scale 2b | 29.98 (4.41) | 29 (4.14) | 30.82 (4.53) | ns |
| Brief Self-Control Scalec | 41.46 (7.79) | 40.58 (9.23) | 42.21 (6.39) | ns |
| Sexual thoughts | 5.06 (.99) | 5.29 (.75) | 4.86 (1.14) | ns |
| Masturbation | 3.77 (1.06) | 3.75 (1.22) | 3.79 (.91) | ns |
| Pornography watching | 3.13 (1.21) | 2.96 (1.23) | 3.29 (1.18) | ns |
| Intercourse | 2.52 (1.46) | 3.45 (.21) | 1.71 (.24) | − 5.31* |
*p < .001
aRange: 30–64, brange: 22–43, crange: 27–61
Percentage of participants reporting a determined frequency of sexual thoughts and sexual behaviors during the last 4 weeks
| Sexual thoughts | Masturbation | Pornography watching | Intercourse | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Several times a day | 40.4 | 3.8 | 0 | 0 |
| Once a day | 32.7 | 15.4 | 9.6 | 7.7 |
| A few times a week | 23.1 | 51.9 | 40.4 | 26.9 |
| Once a week | 0 | 13.5 | 13.5 | 17.3 |
| One or two times per month | 3.8 | 13.5 | 26.9 | 5.8 |
| Not once | 0 | 1.9 | 9.6 | 42.3 |
| Total | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Reaction times of the different conditions in the Negative Affective Priming and in the Approach–Avoidance tasks
| Negative Affective Priming task M (SD) | |||
| 820 (147) | 837 (143) | 840 (155) | 798 (147) |
| 829 (145) | 811 (145) | 834 (145) | 824 (151) |
| Approach–Avoidance task M (SD) | |||
| 1024 (198) | 1037 (188) | 1004 (202) | 1040 (206) |
| 1055 (183) | 1041 (195) | 1066 (181) | 1040 (194) |
Fig. 4Descriptive statistics of the cognitive tasks. a NAP—Negative Affective Priming: Sex P—Sex Priming trials; NS P—Non-Sex Priming trials; Sex NoP—Sex No Priming trials; NS NoP—Non-Sex No Priming trials. b AA—Approach–Avoidance task: Sex App—Sex Approach trials; Sex Av—Sex Avoid trials; Con App—Control Approach trials; Con Av—Control Avoid trials
Correlational statistics between sexual inhibition, general inhibition, and self-control
| Sexual inhibition | General inhibition and self-control | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NAP CI ( | AA CI ( | SIS2 CI ( | GNG FA log CI ( | BSCS CI ( | |
| NAP | 1 | .07 [− .12, .32] (.59) | .01 [− .23, .29] (.97) | .03 [− .28, .35] (.86) | − .21 [.45, .07] (.13) |
| AA | 1 | .6 [− .21, .32] (.68) | − .01 [− .26, .18] (.91) | .04 [.17, .25] (.77) | |
| SIS2 | 1 | .15 [− .12, .43] (.28) | .04 [.17, .25] (.77) | ||
| GNG FA log | 1 | − .17 [.45, .04] (.21) | |||
| BSCS | 1 | ||||
NAP Negative Affective Priming task, AA Approach–Avoidance task, SIS2 Sexual Inhibition Scale factor 2, GNG FA log Go/No-go false alarms (log-transformed), BSCS Brief Self-Control Scale. CI confidence intervals (95%, bootstrap resamples = 1000). In brackets: lower and upper limits. (p) Alpha value
Correlational statistics between sexual inhibition, general inhibition, and sexual excitation measurements, and sexual manifestations frequency
| Tasks | Self-reports | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NAP CI ( | AA CI ( | GNG FA log CI ( | SES CI ( | SIS2 CI ( | BSCS CI ( | |
| Sexual Thoughts | − .36 [− .57, − .13] (.01) | .13 [− .21, .47] (.32) | .02 [− .26, .35] (.84) | .26 [.001, .48] (.06) | − .01 [− .28, .25] (.92) | − .04 [− .32, .21] (.77) |
| Masturbation | − .14 [− .38, .08] (.32) | .15 [− .21, .41] (.27) | .04 [− .23, .37] (.75) | − .004 [− .23, .24] (.97) | − .11 [− .39, .21] (.47) | − .23 [− .48, .04] (.08) |
| Pornography | − .04 [− .29, .21] (.76) | .27 [− .05, .52] (.04) | − .03 [− .34, .29] (.83) | .06 [− .18, .35] (.62) | − .16 [− .36, .11] (.25) | − .26 [− .51, .01] (.06) |
| Intercourse | .01 [− .23, .32] (.91) | .08 [− .36, .21] (.56) | .23 [− .04, .49] (.11) | .11 [− .11, .38] (.46) | − .31 [.05, .52] (.02) | .03 [− 28, .21] (.83) |
NAP Negative Affective Priming Task, AA Approach–Avoidance task, GNG FA log Go/No-go false alarms (log-transformed), SES Sexual Excitation Scale, SIS2 Sexual Inhibition Scale factor 2, BSCS Brief Self-Control Scale. CI confidence intervals (95%, bootstrap resamples = 1000). In brackets: lower and upper limit. (p) Alpha value
Multiple regression models predicting sexual thoughts, individual sexual behavior, and intercourse
Negative Affective Priming task Sexual Excitation Scale | − .37 .26 | − 2.8 2.01 | .007 .05 |
| – | – | ns | |
Approach–Avoidance task Brief Self-Control Scale | − .29 − .29 | − 2.2 − 2.16 | .03 .03 |
| Sexual Inhibition Scale 2 | − .29 | − 2.1 | .04 |
Fig. 5Significant predictors of the frequency of sexual thoughts, individual sexual behavior, and intercourse