Women who report exclusive sexual attractions to men (i.e., androphilia) exhibit gender-nonspecific patterns of sexual response-similar magnitude of genital response to both male and female targets. Interestingly, women reporting any degree of attraction to women (i.e., gynephilia) show significantly greater sexual responses to stimuli depicting female targets compared to male targets. At present, the mechanism(s) underlying these patterns are unknown. According to the information processing model (IPM), attentional processing of sexual cues initiates sexual responding; thus, attention to sexual cues may be one mechanism to explain the observed within-gender differences in specificity findings among women. The purpose of the present study was to examine patterns of initial and controlled visual attention among women with varying sexual attractions. We used eye tracking to assess visual attention to sexually preferred and nonpreferred cues in a sample of 164 women who differed in their degree of androphilia and gynephilia. We found that both exclusively and predominantly androphilic women showed gender-nonspecific patterns of initial attention. In contrast, ambiphilic (i.e., concurrent androphilia and gynephilia) and predominantly/exclusively gynephilic women oriented more quickly toward female targets. Controlled attention patterns mirrored patterns of self-reported sexual attractions for three of these four groups of women, such that gender-specific patterns of visual attention were found for androphilic and gynephilic women. Ambiphilic women looked significantly longer at female targets compared to male targets. These findings support predictions from the IPM and suggest that both initial and controlled attention to sexual cues may be mechanisms contributing to within-gender variation in sexual responding.
Introduction: Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common non-cutaneous cancer in men and is usually identified at a stage at which prolonged survival is expected. Therefore, strategies to address survivorship and promote well-being are crucial. This study’s aim was to better understand suicidal behavior in PCa patients by examining psychosocial mediators (i.e., depression, psychache, perceived burdensomeness [PB], thwarted belongingness [TB]) in the relationship between quality of life (PCa-QoL) and suicide risk. Methods: Four hundred and six men with PCa (Median age 69.35 years, standard deviation 7.79) completed an online survey on various psychosocial variables associated with suicide risk. A combined serial/parallel mediation model tested whether depression, in serial with both psychache and PB/TB, mediated the relationship between PCa-QoL and suicide risk. Results: Over 14% of participants’ self-reports indicated clinically significant suicide risk. Poorer PCa-QoL was related to greater depression, which was related to both greater psychache and PB/TB, which was associated with greater suicide risk. The serial mediation effect of depression and psychache was significantly stronger than that of depression and PB/TB. PCa-QoL did not predict suicide risk through depression alone, showing that depressive symptoms affect suicide risk through psychache and PB/TB. Conclusions: Given the alarming estimate of individuals at-risk for suicide in this study, clinicians should consider patients with poorer PCa-QoL and elevated depression for psychosocial referral or management. Psychache (i.e., psychological pain) and PB/TB (i.e., poor social fit) may be important targets for reducing suicide risk intervention beyond the impact of depression alone.
Lay Summary The safest and most effective treatment for chronic insomnia is Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I). People sometimes struggle to adhere to, or follow the steps, involved in CBT-I because they are challenging (i.e., restricting time in bed to induce sleepiness, getting out of bed when not sleeping). These steps are based on sleep science and research shows that more closely adhering to them relates to better sleep improvements. One way that clinicians can help patients completing CBT-I improve their adherence to the difficult treatment steps is to promote their self-efficacy, or belief that they can effectively complete the treatment steps. Inspired by tried-and-true health promotion techniques rooted in Social Cognitive Theory, this paper describes concrete recommendations that clinicians can use to improve their patients’ self-efficacy when completing CBT-I. These recommendations include suggestions such as setting positive treatment expectations, discussing with patients how to set up for success when completing the treatment steps at home, and how to work with potential barriers to treatment. If clinicians can help boost patients’ self-efficacy, they may be able to carry out the treatment steps of CBT-I more effectively, and ultimately experience more benefits.
Background: Sexual difficulties are common in individuals with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Aims: This study aimed to document sexual difficulties in IBD; to investigate longitudinal patterns in these difficulties; and to identify biopsychosocial factors that may serve as predictors of these difficulties. Methods: A longitudinal study was conducted, with IBD outpatients completing three questionnaires across 2 years. Items assessed biopsychosocial variables (e.g., age, PHQ-9, Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support) and sexual difficulties (Golombok-Rust Inventory of Sexual Satisfaction). Findings: Patients reported a moderate level of sexual difficulties, with 17.5–74.5% exceeding the threshold of clinical significance across domains. No significant changes in sexual difficulties occurred across the study period. Biopsychosocial factors accounted for up to 25.2% of the variance in sexual difficulties, with age, depressive symptoms, pain-related disability, perceived social support, and optimism associated with these difficulties in the hypothesised directions. Conclusions: Patients reported significant sexual difficulties in several domains, with a high degree of stability over time. Biopsychosocial factors were associated with reported sexual difficulties, particularly older age and lower perceived social support. These factors are suggested as targets for intervention research.
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