Vivere meglio
la sessualità

Home page
Archivio news
Per fortuna non
siamo tutti uguali
Fare sesso e
fare all'amore

1 - 2 - 3

I luoghi comuni:
La scelta del partner (1)

quanti partner (2)
quanti partner (3)
Quanti orgasmi (4)
To have sex or
make love
Voglia di conoscersi,
comunicare
Il bacio
La passione
I Porno vorrebbero
farci credere che...
Il corpo e la
comunicazione
non-verbale
Il corpo
Il desiderio
La seduzione
La gelosia
Il tradimento
Il contatto corporeo
Il piacere
Cosa si può fare
Cosa piace a lei
cosa piace a lui
La trasgressione:
farlo in tre
o più

A cura della Dott.ssa
Giuliana Proietti

La timidezza

La fedeltà

Chi è il Dott.
Antonio Turetta

Chi è la Dott.ssa
Serenella Salomoni

Chi è il Prof. Dott.
Lamberto Coppola

 

 

Sexuality


By Marco Dal Negro

www.mybestlife.com

 

Italiano - English 

 


Evidence That Brains Are Sexy, Too… (03/10/2012)

 

It’s a tale as old as time: a man wants a shallow, beautiful, ”easy” woman instead of a nice, respectful woman with brains, but according to a new study conducted at The Kinsey Institute, this could be just a stereotype.

The study says that some men actually do get aroused by women with brains. While physical attractiveness is also important for men, intelligence has been described as a turn-on and an attractive quality when trying to find a partner.
Good news for smart girls everywhere! And even more reason to stay in school.
Hopefully this will help intelligent girls to stop hiding behind their bodies and use their brains.

When it comes to sex, some men are from Mars, others from Venus. Researchers at the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction at Indiana University finds that men report a variety of different experiences involving sexual desire and arousal.

Men participating in focus groups expressed a range of experiences and feelings relating to such matters as the relationship between erections and desire, the importance of scent and relationships, and a woman's intelligence.

The Kinsey Institute study, appearing in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior, is unique because few studies so far have examined how closely the findings of decades of laboratory studies on sex actually reflect the experiences of men.
"We have a lot of assumptions about how men think and feel and behave sexually," said Erick Janssen, associate scientist at the Kinsey Institute. "We use all kinds of methods to measure men's sexual responses; in addition, we use questionnaires and surveys to ask about sexual behaviors. It's less common to sit down with men and ask them to talk about their experiences."

The focus groups involved 50 men divided into three groups based on their age (18-24 years, 25-45 years and 46 and older). Below are some examples of the different experiences reported by the men:

. Some factors, such as depression or a risk of being caught having sex, were reported by some men as inhibiting sex, while other men found that they can enhance their desire and arousal.

  • An erection is not the main cue for men to know they are sexually aroused. Most of the men responded that they can experience erections without feeling aroused or interested, leading researchers to suggest that erections are not good criteria for determining sexual arousal in men.

  • Many men found it difficult to distinguish between sexual desire and sexual arousal, a distinction prominent in most sexual response models used by researchers and clinicians.

  • The changes in the quality of older men's erections had a direct effect on their sexual encounters, including, for some, a shifting focus to the partner and her sexual enjoyment.
    Older men also consistently mentioned that as they aged, they became more careful and particular in choosing sexual partners.

  • The sexual history of women also mattered to the men, but differently for different age groups.
    Sexually experienced women were considered more threatening by younger men, who had concerns about "measuring up," but such women were considered more arousing for older men.

Janssen and his colleagues at the Kinsey Institute have been working for more than 10 years on a theoretical model that focuses on sexual excitation and sexual inhibition. They refer to this as the dual control model of sexual response.
It holds that separate and relatively independent activating and suppressing sexual systems exist within the central nervous system and that the balance between these two systems determines a person's sexual response in any particular situation.
Janssen relates this to the gas and break pedals in a vehicle, both can influence a car's behavior (you can slow down by letting go of the gas or by pressing the brake) but they do so in different ways.
This model is used around the world by sex researchers in studies on topics as varied as sexual dysfunction and sexual risk taking. To measure the propensity for sexual excitation and inhibition, the researchers designed a questionnaire.

"One of the main conclusions of the focus group study is that, just like women, men are different," Janssen said. "Sex researchers tend to focus a lot on differences between men and women, while not giving as much attention to the differences that exist among men, and women. This research is part of a larger agenda at the Kinsey Institute of looking at individual differences. This dates back to Alfred Kinsey's original research, but in our current research we not only try to capture the variations in men and women's sexual experiences, we also try to understand better what explains variations in those experiences."

Co-authors of the study are Kimberly R. McBride, IU School of Medicine; William Yarber, Department of Applied Health Science; Brandon J. Hill, Department of Gender Studies; and Scott M. Butler, Georgia College and State University.

For more information
"Factors that Influence Sexual Arousal in Men: A Focus Group Study," Archives of Sexual Behavior.

(MDN)

 


Home di mybestlife.com - Salute - Sessualità - Gola - Depressione - I consigli del nonno - Musica - Grafologia - Ambiente - Per saperne di più - Viaggi: tutto in una pagina - Meteo - Ridere - Mix

Cerca nel sito

Chi siamo e come contattarci

Copyright © 1998/2018 mybestlife.com tutti i diritti sono riservati eccetto quelli già di altri proprietari.

 

 

 

 


 

[_private/root_princ/juiceadv300x250.htm]

 

[_private/root_princ/juiceadv300x250.htm]


-

[_private/root_princ/juiceadv_overlay.htm]