Masturbation parameters: their relation to sexual arousal in young people who engage in same-sex relationships
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sánchez Pérez, Gracia María; Granados de Haro, María Reina; Mangas Juárez, Pablo; Sierra Freire, Juan CarlosEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Masturbation parameters Same-sex relationships Sexual excitation
Fecha
2025-03-19Referencia bibliográfica
Sánchez-Pérez GM, Granados R, Mangas P and Sierra JC (2025) Masturbation parameters: their relation to sexual arousal in young people who engage in same-sex relationships. Front. Psychol. 16:1544691. [doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1544691]
Patrocinador
Grant Ref. PREDOC_00289 funded by the Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades (Junta de Andalucía); Grant CEX2023-001312-M, funded by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033Resumen
Background: Interest in masturbation in sexual orientation and gender diversity
research are rather limited. Extending this research field to include this type
of population by considering different masturbation parameters is necessary.
In this respect, various masturbation parameters (i.e., negative attitudes toward
masturbation, solitary sexual desire, current masturbation frequency, subjective
orgasm experience) were validated in a laboratory study with different measures
of sexual arousal in persons who engage in same-sex relationships.
Aim: Our main aim was to provide evidence to support the validity of the
different masturbation parameters in young people who engage in same-sex
relationships. The association between masturbation parameters and various
sexual arousal measures (genital response, rating of sexual arousal and rating of
genital sensations) was analyzed.
Methods: During a lab task, 72 young adults who engaged in same-sex
relationships (36 women, 36 men; age range: 18–32 years) watched contentneutral
and sexually explicit films. They included scenes of self-exploration and
solitary masturbation behaviors performed by individuals of the same sex as
the participants. Negative attitudes toward masturbation, solitary sexual desire,
current masturbation frequency, dimensions of subjective orgasm experience
in the solitary masturbation context (i.e., affective, sensory, intimacy, rewards),
propensity for sexual excitation, genital response (i.e., penile circumference and
vaginal pulse amplitude), rating of sexual arousal and rating of genital sensations
were assessed. Regression models were conducted to explain the arousal
measures with masturbation parameters.
Results: In women, the intimacy dimension of the subjective orgasm experience
in masturbation (β = 0.42, p = 0.007) and solitary sexual desire (β = 0.32,
p = 0.040) predicted the rating of sexual arousal by explaining 24.1% of its
variance. Conversely for men, the rewards dimension of the subjective orgasm
experience in masturbation (β = 0.40, p = 0.016) significantly predicted genital
response and explained 13.4% of its variance.
Conclusion: Our findings validate some examined masturbation parameters
(specifically solitary sexual desire and subjective orgasm experience) in young
adults who engage in same-sex relationships. Gender differences in the
masturbation parameters were observed for the relevance of these masturbation
parameters for explaining sexual arousal. These findings support the relation
between masturbation and sexual function.