A recently published study strongly suggests men succumb to
sexual temptations more than women for example, cheating on a partner — because
they experience strong sexual impulses, not because they have weak self-control
Previous research has shown that men are more likely than
women to pursue romantic partners that are “off limits.” However, until now,
the explanation for this sex difference was largely unexplored.
One possible explanation for this effect is that men
experience stronger sexual impulses than women do. A second possibility is that
women have better self-control than men. The current study’s results support
the former explanation and provide new insight into humans’ evolutionary
origins.
“Overall, these studies suggest that men are more likely to
give in to sexual temptations because they tend to have stronger sexual impulse
strength than women do,” says Natasha Tidwell, a doctoral student in the
Department of Psychology at Texas A&M University, who authored the study.
Paul Eastwick, assistant professor in the Department of Human Development and
Family Sciences at The University of Texas at Austin, co-authored the study.
“But when people exercise self-control in a given situation,
this sex difference in behavior is greatly reduced. It makes sense that
self-control, which has relatively recent evolutionary origins compared to
sexual impulses, would work similarly — and as effectively – for both men and
women,” Tidwell said.
Recently published in Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, the study was composed of two separate experiments: the first, to
determine how the sexes reacted to real-life sexual temptations in their past
and, the second, to pick apart sexual impulses and self-control using a
rapid-fire reaction time task.
In order to test their first hypothesis, researchers
recruited 218 (70 male, 148 female) study participants from the United States.
Participants were first asked to recall and describe an
attraction to an unavailable or incompatible member of the opposite sex. They
then answered survey questions designed to measure strength of sexual impulse,
attempts to intentionally control the sexual impulse, and resultant behaviors.
“When men reflected on their past sexual behavior, they
reported experiencing relatively stronger impulses and acting on those impulses
more than women did,” says Tidwell.
However, men and women did not differ in the extent to which
they exerted self-control.
“When men and women said they actually did exert
self-control in sexual situations, impulse strength didn’t predict how much
either sex would actually engage in ‘off-limits’ sex,” added Tidwell.
• Source: Science Daily
No comments:
Post a Comment