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Sexual Orientation

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Bell, Weinberg and Hammersmith In depth interviews comparing gays/ lesbians and straights. No support for psychoanalytic, learning or sociological (labelling) theories. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sexual Orientation


1
Sexual Orientation
2
Definitions
  • 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

3
Definitions
  • The scientific study of homosexuality
  • Frequency
  • Who is?
  • Need a definition
  • Self-label
  • Behaviour
  • How often?
  • When?
  • Tea room men, Indonesian men
  • Causes

4
Definitions
  • 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)
6
Definitions
  • Asexual category
  • Not attracted to either sex
  • Non-existent sex drive
  • Hormonal deficiency
  • Central nervous system misconnection
  • Possible early trauma

7
Definitions
  • 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

8
Definitions
  • 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

9
Attitudes
  • Heterosexism
  • Heterosexual normal
  • Homophobia
  • Strong, irrational fears of homosexuals
  • Homonegativity
  • Negative attitudes and behaviors toward
    homosexuals
  • Cultural attitude based on religious teachings

10
Attitudes
  • Same sex marriage
  • Equal rights
  • Minority group
  • Stereotypes
  • Many negative consequences
  • Assault
  • Rejection
  • Discrimination
  • Suicide

11
Attitudes
  • 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

12
Research
  • 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

13
Gender 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

14
Gender 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

15
Gender 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

16
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Several possible ways to acquire sexual
    orientation
  • Basic human needs shared by all
  • Sensual/sexual fulfillment
  • Socio-emotional connection

17
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Possible variables involved
  • Genes
  • Hormones in utero
  • Subtle intrauterine interactions
  • Brain timing
  • Early influences
  • Identity problems
  • Social stereotypes, prejudice

18
Development 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

19
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Genetic
  • Twin Studies

Monozygotic Dizygotic Adopted
Genetic Similarity 100 50 0
Concordance Rate 52 22 11
20
Development 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

21
Development 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

22
Development 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

23
Development 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.

24
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Sociological theories
  • Importance of labels
  • Labels affect perception
  • Perception affects behaviour
  • This can influence self-perception
  • Leading to self-labelling.

25
Development 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.

26
Bem The Exotic Becomes Erotic
Boys more active and aggressive
Different exotic
27
Bems 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.

28
Bems 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.

29
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Sample of 979
  • Close coupled
  • One long-time partner
  • Marriage type relationship
  • Few problems
  • Few sex partners
  • Infrequent cruising

30
Bell 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

31
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Functional
  • Not coupled
  • High number of sex partners
  • Few problems
  • Younger
  • High sex drive
  • Few regrets

32
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Dysfunctional
  • Not coupled
  • High number of partners
  • Many sex and psychological problems
  • Tense
  • Unhappy
  • Depressed

33
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Asexual
  • Low in sexual interest and activity
  • Less exclusively gay
  • Very secretive
  • Loners
  • Highest incidence of suicidal thoughts

34
Bell, 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.
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