Title: Sexual Orientation
1Sexual Orientation
2Definitions
- Sexual Orientation
- Whom we are sexually attracted to
- Capable of falling in love with
- Sexual Identity
- Ones self identity
- Usually seen as a dichotomy
- Homosexual
- Heterosexual
- Bisexual
3Definitions
- The scientific study of homosexuality
- Frequency
- Who is?
- Need a definition
- Self-label
- Behaviour
- How often?
- When?
- Tea room men, Indonesian men
- Causes
4Definitions
- Kinsey
- 37 of all males had at least one same sex
experience to orgasm in adulthood - 1 10 of the population
- Canadian Community Health Survey
- National Health and Life Styles Survey
- Twice as many men as women
5(No Transcript)
6Definitions
- Asexual category
- Not attracted to either sex
- Non-existent sex drive
- Hormonal deficiency
- Central nervous system misconnection
- Possible early trauma
7Definitions
- Bisexuality
- 33 - if based on one encounter
- Higher sex drive
- More sexual activity in general, including
masturbation. - More high risk behaviour
- Majority married (heterorole)
- Sexual pleasure oriented
- Few cultural images
8Definitions
- Danger
- 71 of bisexual men do not tell their female
partners - STDs AIDS
- Adolescent males
- Very common transitional stage
- Difficulty
- Rejected by both hetero and homo
- Called fence-sitters, some feel pressured to go
in either direction - Many gays reject the concept, saying that bis
are misguided homosexuals
9Attitudes
- Heterosexism
- Heterosexual normal
- Homophobia
- Strong, irrational fears of homosexuals
- Homonegativity
- Negative attitudes and behaviors toward
homosexuals - Cultural attitude based on religious teachings
10Attitudes
- Same sex marriage
- Equal rights
- Minority group
- Stereotypes
- Many negative consequences
- Assault
- Rejection
- Discrimination
- Suicide
11Attitudes
- Same-sex sexual activity illegal in Canada
- Decriminalized in 1969
- Criminal code still discriminates
- Age of consent for anal sex is 18 (14 for
vaginal) - Charter of Human Rights
- Sexual orientation prohibited ground for
discrimination
12Research
- Adams, Wright and Lohr (1996) gave test to
measure homophobia to male college students - Group 1 high scores
- Group 2 low scores
- All participants were hooked to plethysmograph
that measured erection - They all watched film clips of hetero, gay and
lesbian sex - Group 1 54 had increased penile errection
- Group 2 24 had increased penile circumference
13Gender Differences
- In an experiment heterosexual and homosexual
males and females watched videos of - Heterosexual sex
- Male gay sex
- Lesbian sex
- Nude males
- Nude females
- Bonobos having sex
- The participants were hooked to a plethysmograph
and were asked to report verbally when they were
aroused
14Gender Differences
- Heterosexual males became aroused when watching
- Heterosexual sex
- Lesbian sex
- Nude females
- Homosexual males became aroused when watching
- Male homosexual sex
- Nude males
- 100 concordance between plethysmograph results
and self report
15Gender Differences
- Both heterosexual and homosexual women were
aroused by all the videos according to the
plethysmograph - Self reports were at odds with objective data
- Women are not aware when they are aroused
- Another gender difference
- More women self-label bisexual than males
- More women switch sexual orientation over their
life times
16Development of Sexual Orientation
- Several possible ways to acquire sexual
orientation - Basic human needs shared by all
- Sensual/sexual fulfillment
- Socio-emotional connection
17Development of Sexual Orientation
- Possible variables involved
- Genes
- Hormones in utero
- Subtle intrauterine interactions
- Brain timing
- Early influences
- Identity problems
- Social stereotypes, prejudice
18Development of Sexual Orientation
- Cannot look for THE cause
- INTERACTIONS
- Individual differences in etiology
- Circumstances
- Jail, boarding school
- Cross-cultural evidence
- Prescribed homosexuality at certain age-stage
- Definition found in many cultures
- gay man is the one that is penetrated
19Development of Sexual Orientation
Monozygotic Dizygotic Adopted
Genetic Similarity 100 50 0
Concordance Rate 52 22 11
20Development of Sexual Orientation
- Prenatal factors
- Sexual differentiation and innappropriate
hormones - Severe maternal stress (animal studies)
- Maternal stress is retrospective
- No tally of stressed expectant mothers who had
heterosexual children
21Development of Sexual Orientation
- Prenatal factors
- Very high levels of estrogen
- Lesbian offspring
- Birth order (Canadian)
- Males with several older brothers
- 2D4D finger-length ratio
- Handedness
- No agreement in different studies, contradictory
data
22Development of Sexual Orientation
- Brain differences
- Hypothalamus
- Small sample
- Non-comparable
- Cause of death
- Difference due to orientation or to disease and
its treatment? - Other differences found, but all in adults after
the fact (chicken/egg) - Endocrine imbalance
- No differences found
23Development of Sexual Orientation
- Learning
- Possible in some cases
- Polymorphously Perverse
- Personal negative experience could override
social reinforcement patterns - Also, peer group can provide more reinforcement
than society at large.
24Development of Sexual Orientation
- Sociological theories
- Importance of labels
- Labels affect perception
- Perception affects behaviour
- This can influence self-perception
- Leading to self-labelling.
25Development of Sexual Orientation
- Reiss
- Negative pathway
- Rigidly polarized societies have higher incidence
of male-male sex - High maternal involvement Low paternal
- Little opportunity to learn
- Positive pathway
- Very permissive societies
- Experimentation OK.
26Bem The Exotic Becomes Erotic
Boys more active and aggressive
Different exotic
27Bems Theory Criticisms
- There is NO abundant evidence of inborn
aggression and activity levels by gender - Contaminated by culture.
- Homosocial activities are mostly a cultural
phenomenon. - Children who dont fit the gender stereotypes are
clearly told they are odd and wrong.
28Bems Theory Criticisms
- Many gays are gender typical in their
interests, appearance, etc. Bem fell for the
effeminate guy/macho woman stereotype of gays. - Many atypical (i.e., boys who played with dolls,
girls who played with trucks) kids do not go on
to become gay.
29Bell and Weinberg Typology
- Sample of 979
- Close coupled
- One long-time partner
- Marriage type relationship
- Few problems
- Few sex partners
- Infrequent cruising
30Bell and Weinberg Typology
- Open coupled
- steady live-in partner
- Also many outside partners
- Frequent cruising
- More likely to have problems
- More likely to regret being gay
31Bell and Weinberg Typology
- Functional
- Not coupled
- High number of sex partners
- Few problems
- Younger
- High sex drive
- Few regrets
32Bell and Weinberg Typology
- Dysfunctional
- Not coupled
- High number of partners
- Many sex and psychological problems
- Tense
- Unhappy
- Depressed
33Bell and Weinberg Typology
- Asexual
- Low in sexual interest and activity
- Less exclusively gay
- Very secretive
- Loners
- Highest incidence of suicidal thoughts
34Bell, Weinberg and Hammersmith
- In depth interviews comparing gays/ lesbians and
straights. - No support for psychoanalytic, learning or
sociological (labelling) theories. - They speculate a biological basis but have no
data.