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The Psychology of Sexual Orientation

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Title: The Psychology of Sexual Orientation


1
The Psychology of Sexual Orientation
  • Bill Altermatt

2
Why is this important?
  • Homosexuality is so stigmatized in our culture
    that homosexuals are often singled out for
    harassment, intimidation, and even murder.
  • Hate groups blame homosexuals for choosing
    their orientation.
  • If orientation is not a choice, individuals are
    not responsible for it.

Matthew Shepard, brutally killed in Laramie,
Wyoming, in 1998
Picketing outside Matthews funeral
3
What is sexual orientation?
  • Enduring emotional, romantic, sexual, or
    affectional attraction toward...

4
How common is homosexuality?
  • Rates of homosexuality across many studies,
    involving thousands of respondents from many
    countries
  • 3-4 of men
  • 1-2 of women

5
What causes sexual orientation?
  • Personal choice?
  • Environmental influences (e.g., childrearing
    practices, sexual abuse, etc.)?
  • Genetic or biological influence?

6
Personal choice? No.
  • Why would it be chosen?
  • High costs of homosexuality in our culture
  • When would it be chosen?
  • Orientation emerges prior to sexual experience,
    so how would you know what you were choosing?
  • Changeable through willpower? No.
  • Research indicates you can control behavior but
    not orientation (desire)

7
Environment? No evidence.
  • Kinsey Institute survey (Bell et al., 1981
    Hammersmith, 1982)
  • Compared 1,000 homosexuals and 500 heterosexuals
    on every imagined possible cause of homosexuality
  • Parental relationships, childhood sexual
    experiences, peer relationships, dating
    experiences
  • No differences found between heterosexuals and
    homosexuals.

8
Biological? Probably.
  • Critics of homosexuality regard it as
    unnatural, against biology, and the product
    of human culture.
  • But Bruce Bagermihl (1999) reports that sexual
    behavior has been documented by biologists in
    over 450 species

9
Bagermihl (1999)
  • 6-10 of rams are not interested in ewes and seek
    to mount other males (Perkins Fitzgerald, 1997)

10
Bagermihl (1999)
  • Every homosexual behavior performed by humans has
    been documented in non-human animals

11
Bagermihl (1999)
  • In many species, same-sex attraction leads to
    long-term bonds between partners, who sometimes
    raise offspring together.

A homosexual pair of male Flamingos raising their
foster chick.
12
Unnatural?
  • If the definition of natural is occurring in
    nature, then homosexuality appears to be very
    natural.
  • Given the widespread prevalence of homosexuality
    among non-humans, it is unlikely that
    homosexuality is the product of human culture and
    more likely that there is a biological cause of
    homosexuality.

13
Evidence that sexual orientation is biological
  • Family studies
  • 9 of brothers of gay men are gay (compared to
    3-4 on average)
  • 6 of sisters of lesbian women are lesbian
    (compared to 1-2 on average)
  • Adopted twin studies rule out same-house
    effects
  • Bailey et al. (2000) studied 1,538 twin pairs and
    estimated h2 .51 for males, .23 for females
  • 51 of the similarity in homosexuality between
    two males can be explained by the genes they
    share.

14
Evidence that sexual orientation is biological
  • Fraternal birth order effect
  • Each older brother increases the probability of
    male homosexuality by approximately 1
  • Likely cause maternal immune response to male
    fetuses, which increases with each pregnancy
  • Probably explains 15 of male homosexuality
  • No birth order effect for lesbians

15
Major theories for biological origins of sexual
orientation
  • Neurohormonal hypothesis sexual orientation is
    determined by hormones acting on the brain during
    prenatal development
  • Neuroanatomical hypothesis sexual orientation
    is determined by structural differences in the
    brains of homosexuals and heterosexuals

16
Neurohormonal hypothesis
  • Hypothesis
  • prenatal androgen activity in the brain ?
    attraction to females
  • absence of such activity ? attraction to males
  • Evidence
  • Female infants with CAH (high prenatal androgen
    exposure)
  • 48 reported arousal imagery for females
    (compared to 7 in control condition)
  • 22 reported sexual contact with females
    (compared to 4)

17
More neurohormonal evidence
  • Males with AIS (androgen insensitivity syndrome)
    brains do not respond to androgen
  • Externally female, no ovaries
  • 100 reported attraction to males
  • Male infants with cloacal exstrophy (ambiguous
    genitalia) reassigned female (with surgery
    hormones).
  • By age 14, 100 reported sexual attraction to
    females (Reiner, 2002).

18
Neurohormonal conclusions
  • Sexual orientation is probably influenced by
    exposure to hormones before birth
  • Exposure to androgens (and sensitive to
    androgens) ? attracted to females
  • Normal males, reassigned males, CAH females
  • Not exposed to androgens (or insensitive to
    androgens) ? attracted to males
  • Normal females, AIS males

19
Neuroanatomical hypothesis
  • One structure in the brain that corresponds to
    attraction to males or females is INAH-3

20
INAH-3
  • Sex differences
  • Three studies found that INAH-3 is 2x larger in
    men than in women
  • Sexual orientation
  • Three studies found that INAH-3 is 2-3x larger in
    heterosexual men than in homosexual men
  • Similar differences observed in rams exhibiting
    same-sex preferences

21
INAH-3 Conclusions
  • Evidence suggests larger INAH-3 predicts
    attraction to females, smaller INAH-3 predicts
    attraction to males
  • Problems with INAH-3 research
  • Cause or effect unclear
  • Studies have not included lesbians

22
General conclusions
  • No evidence that sexual orientation is caused by
    personal choice or by a particular environmental
    factor.
  • Strong evidence that sexual orientation has a
    biological/genetic component.
  • Evidence for the effects of genes, prenatal
    hormones, and brain structure
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