2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-018-1152-4
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Implicit and Explicit Associations with Erotic Stimuli in Women with and Without Sexual Problems

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Cited by 5 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
(90 reference statements)
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“…In men, better orgasmic functioning was associated with lower levels of implicit liking of erotic stimuli, but implicit sex-wanting associations did not correlate with any aspect of sexual functioning. These starkly contrasting findings, nevertheless, replicated results in previous studies of our research group in female and male patient samples with and without self-and clinician-diagnosed sexual dysfunctions (van Lankveld, Bandell et al, 2018;van Lankveld, de Jong, et al, 2018;van Lankveld et al, 2015), using similar methodology. The present findings in female participants are also similar to those of Dewitte (2015), who investigated a substantially younger sample.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…In men, better orgasmic functioning was associated with lower levels of implicit liking of erotic stimuli, but implicit sex-wanting associations did not correlate with any aspect of sexual functioning. These starkly contrasting findings, nevertheless, replicated results in previous studies of our research group in female and male patient samples with and without self-and clinician-diagnosed sexual dysfunctions (van Lankveld, Bandell et al, 2018;van Lankveld, de Jong, et al, 2018;van Lankveld et al, 2015), using similar methodology. The present findings in female participants are also similar to those of Dewitte (2015), who investigated a substantially younger sample.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…However, these studies are also subject to methodological difficulties and may not (adequately) capture more automatic or pre-attentive associations. Indirect measures may provide a complementary approach and studies using these measures found evidence for negative automatic associations (van Lankveld et al, 2018a) and interpretations (Velten et al, 2019) in women with low levels of sexual desire and low sexual functioning. Given the importance of appraisals for sexual motivation and sexual functioning, and the small number of studies having investigated the relative contribution of associations and interpretations to problems concerning low sexual desire, further studies are needed.…”
Section: Scenario Taskmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This indicated that women with HSDD exhibited less positive appraisals of sexual stimuli. To distinguish the affective valence (i.e., how much women like sex) from the motivational value (i.e., how much women want sex) of sexual stimuli, van Lankveld et al ( 2018a ) employed two different STIATs in a sample of women with sexual complaints (including low sexual desire) and healthy controls. The STIATs were used to assess whether women with sexual complaints automatically associated pictures displaying sexual intercourse with either the categories positive/negative (STIAT-liking; representing affective valence) or with the categories I want/I do not want (STIAT-wanting; representing motivational value).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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