Whether you're gay, straight or somewhere else on the spectrum, the truth of who attracts you could be in your eyes.
Pupil dilation is an accurate indicator of sexual orientation, a new study finds. When people look at erotic images and become aroused,
their pupils open up in an unconscious reaction that could be used to
study orientation and arousal without invasive genital measurements.
The new study is first large-scale experiment to show that pupil
dilation matches what people report feeling turned on by, said study
researcher Ritch Savin-Williams, a developmental psychologist at Cornell
University.
"So if a man says he's straight, his eyes are dilating towards women," Savin-Williams told LiveScience. "And the opposite with gay men, their eyes are dilating to men."
The eyes have it
The link between pupil size and arousal goes way back. In 16th-century
Italy, women would take eye drops made from the toxic herb Belladona,
which kept their pupils from constricting and was thought to bestow a
seductive look.
In fact, Savin-Williams said, the pupils dilate slightly in response to
any exciting or interesting stimulus, including a loved one's face or a
beautiful piece of art.
The dilation is a sign that the autonomic nervous system — the system
that controls involuntary actions like pulse and breathing — is ramping
up.
Traditionally, researchers have studied arousal and sexual orientation
by asking volunteers to watch erotic movies or pictures while attached
to instruments that measure blood flow to the genitals. For men, this
involves a circumference measurement of the penis, while women use a
probe that measures pressure change in the blood vessels of the vaginal
walls.
These measurements have drawbacks, Savin-Williams said. Some people can suppress their genital arousal, or simply don't have genital responses in a laboratory environment. And then there's the invasiveness issue.
"Some people just don't want to be involved in research that involves their genitals," Savin-Williams said.
Simply asking people if a given stimulus turns them on or not is
equally problematic, as people may be ashamed to admit their desires or
even deny them to themselves. It's also difficult to ask direct
questions about sexual orientation in many cultures, Savin-Williams
said. [5 Myths About Gay People, Debunked]
Measuring arousal
To get around these issues, Savin-Williams and his colleague Gerulf
Rieger, also of Cornell University, turned to the pupils. They recruited
165 men and 160 women, including gay, straight and bisexual
participants. These volunteers watched separate one-minute videos of a
man masturbating, a woman masturbating and neutral landscape scenes. The
videos were all matched for brightness so that differences in light
wouldn't skew the results.
A gaze-tracking camera recorded the pupils during these videos,
measuring tiny changes in pupil size. People also reported their own
feelings of arousal to each video.
The results showed that pupil dilation matches the pattern seen in
genital arousal studies. In men, this pattern is generally
straightforward: Straight men respond to sexual images of women, and gay
men respond to sexual images of men. Bisexual men respond to both men
and women.
In women, things are more complex, Savin-Williams said. Gay women show
more pupil dilation to images of other women, similar to the pattern
seen in straight men. But straight women dilate basically equally in
response to erotic images of both sexes, despite reporting feelings of
arousal for men and not women. [6 Gender Myths Busted]
This doesn't mean that all straight women are secretly bisexual,
Savin-Williams warned, just that their subjective arousal doesn't
necessarily match their body's arousal. Sex researchers aren't sure why
this happens. One theory is that because women have been at risk of
being raped throughout history, they evolved to respond with lubrication
to any sexual stimulus, no matter how unappealing. This idea holds that
women who did so were less likely to experience trauma or infection
after sexual assault, making it more likely that they would survive to
pass on their genes.
The researchers detail their findings today (Aug. 3) in the journal
PLoS ONE. The next step, Savin-Williams said, is to look at pupil
measurements and genital measurements at the same time, to test how well
they correspond.
Eventually, he said, this technology could be used to conduct
cross-cultural studies of sexuality, given that pupil dilation is
universal and doesn't depend on labels of sexual orientation that may
not translate across all languages. The method could even be used to
help people who are confused about their sexuality sort through their desires, Savin-Williams said.
2 comments:
That's some interesting shit there, mate. Thanks for posting it!
That's some interesting shit there mate... including the theory about female arousal and rape?! Thanks for posting it.
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