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. 2010 Feb;57(2):263-8.
doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2009.12.005. Epub 2009 Dec 23.

Women's interest in visual sexual stimuli varies with menstrual cycle phase at first exposure and predicts later interest

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Women's interest in visual sexual stimuli varies with menstrual cycle phase at first exposure and predicts later interest

Kim Wallen et al. Horm Behav. 2010 Feb.

Abstract

This study investigated whether women's interest in visual sexual stimuli varied with their hormonal state. Viewing times of 30 women, 15 normal cycling (NC) and 15 oral contracepting (OC), to sexually explicit photos were measured at three different times. NC women were tested during their menstrual, periovulatory, and luteal phases, and OC women were tested at equivalent temporal intervals. Subjects viewed stimuli as long as desired, thus viewing time measured subject interest. Subjective ratings of stimulus sexual attractiveness were obtained on each test. There was no overall relationship between menstrual cycle phase and viewing time. However the participant's menstrual cycle phase during first exposure to sexual stimuli predicted subsequent interest in sexual stimuli during the next two tests. NC women who first viewed stimuli during their periovulatory phase looked longer at the sexual stimuli across all sessions than did women first tested in their luteal phase. OC women first exposed to the sexual stimuli during menstruation looked longer at the stimuli across all sessions than did OC women first exposed at other test phases. Neither current test phase nor initial cycle phase influenced subjective ratings. Women had increased interest in sexual stimuli across all sessions if first exposed to sexual stimuli when endogenous estrogens were most likely highest. These data suggest that women's interest in visual sexual stimuli is modulated by hormones such that the hormonal condition at first exposure possibly determines the stimuli's emotional valence, markedly affecting subsequent interest in sexual stimuli.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Average Viewing Time across all test sessions by menstrual test phase depending on contraceptive use. Viewing time did not differ overall by menstrual test cycle phase.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Average Viewing Time across at each test session by menstrual start phase depending on contraceptive use. Viewing time was longest for NC Women tested initially during their periovulatory versus luteal phase (p = .03), and longest for OC Women tested first during their menstrual phase (F2,40 = 6.73, p = .003) compared to both other cycle phases (vs. periovulatory, p =.002; vs. luteal p = .004).

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