Stopped cold: Motor-response inhibition reduces the capacity of sexually-explicit stimuli to elicit subjective and physiological sexual arousal
Autor: | Tuuli M. Kukkonen, Rachel L. Driscoll, Mark J. Fenske, Elizabeth M. Clancy, Codeluppi Sa |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
PsyArXiv|Life Sciences
PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Perception Sexual arousal bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognition and Perception bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive Psychology PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences bepress|Life Sciences PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Social and Personality Psychology|Sexuality bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Cognitive Psychology bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Social Psychology bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Personality and Social Contexts PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Emotion PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Social and Personality Psychology Psychology Neuroscience Response inhibition |
DOI: | 10.31234/osf.io/ua2f4 |
Popis: | The motivational incentive of sexual stimuli can be a salient force in determining the focus of thought and behaviour. Here we show that the simple act of not pressing a key during the perception of sexual content reduces its motivational incentive and subsequent capacity to elicit sexual arousal. Undergraduate participants (N=116) completed a Go/No-go task that required them to inhibit responses to either sexual or non-sexual images. Later they watched sexually explicit videos and reported moment-to-moment changes in self-reported sexual arousal, while thermography was used to record changes in genital physiological arousal. Participants who previously inhibited sexual images experienced lower levels of both self-reported and physiological arousal than those who inhibited non-sexual images. These results extend prior research to suggest that a by-product of motor-response inhibition is a negative alteration of stimulus-value representations for associated items— the kind of value that drives even the most biologically-fundamental forms of motivated behaviour. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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