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Visual attention to erotic stimuli in androphilic male-to-female transsexuals. Sarah A. The present study investigated sex differences in visual attention to erotic stimuli by comparing three groups of individuals: heterosexual men, heterosexual women, and androphilic MtF transsexuals. Twenty men, 20 women and 13 MtF transsexuals were shown 10 split-screen slides, each featuring one nude erotic photo of a man shown on half of the screen and one nude erotic photo of a woman shown on the other half of the screen.
Eye movements were tracked as participants viewed the slides. All participants were heterosexual Kinsey relative to gender identity, thus erotic targets for natal men were nude women in the photos, and erotic targets for women and MtF transsexuals were nude men.
Results replicated Lykins, Meana and Strauss in that heterosexual men evidenced a category-specific visual preference for their erotic targets whereas women did not. Moreover, androphilic MtF transsexuals, like men, were found to visually attend significantly more to their erotic targets men than to their non-erotic targets women , revealing a category-specific visual attention pattern to sexual stimuli. This finding suggests that cognitive processing in response to sexual stimuli, at least at the level of visual attention, may be rooted in natal sex.
Results are discussed in terms of their implications for different theories of MtF transsexuality. Cognition; Cognitive psychology; Erotic stimuli; Eye tracking; Gender differences; Male-to-female transsexuals; Psychology; Sex differences Psychology ; Sexual excitement; Transsexualism; Visual attention; Visual evoked response.
Akhter, Sarah A. Advanced Search. Privacy Copyright. All items in Digital Scholarship UNLV are protected by original copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Skip to main content University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Title Visual attention to erotic stimuli in androphilic male-to-female transsexuals. Author Sarah A.