Conduct of this research and preparation of this report were supported in part by funds from the ... more Conduct of this research and preparation of this report were supported in part by funds from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism by way of a New Investigator Research Award (AA06776) to William H. George. Gratitude is expressed to Lorraine ...
Summarizes physiological findings and reviews the psychological experimental literature investiga... more Summarizes physiological findings and reviews the psychological experimental literature investigating the relationship between alcohol and human sexuality. Specifically, the authors attempt to reconcile the apparent contradictions found in the effects of alcohol on male and female sexual responding. The review concludes (a) that alcohol disinhibits psychological sexual arousal and suppresses physiological responding, the former effect being stronger at lower doses of alcohol and the latter effect at higher doses; (b) that although suppression is strictly pharmacological in nature, disinhibition appears to be both pharmacological (the result of cognitive impairment) and psychological (the result of socially learned expectancies); and (c) that expectancies and cognitive impairment can disinhibit separately or jointly.
Conduct of this research and preparation of this report were supported in part by funds from the ... more Conduct of this research and preparation of this report were supported in part by funds from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism by way of a New Investigator Research Award (AA06776) to William H. George. Gratitude is expressed to Lorraine ...
Summarizes physiological findings and reviews the psychological experimental literature investiga... more Summarizes physiological findings and reviews the psychological experimental literature investigating the relationship between alcohol and human sexuality. Specifically, the authors attempt to reconcile the apparent contradictions found in the effects of alcohol on male and female sexual responding. The review concludes (a) that alcohol disinhibits psychological sexual arousal and suppresses physiological responding, the former effect being stronger at lower doses of alcohol and the latter effect at higher doses; (b) that although suppression is strictly pharmacological in nature, disinhibition appears to be both pharmacological (the result of cognitive impairment) and psychological (the result of socially learned expectancies); and (c) that expectancies and cognitive impairment can disinhibit separately or jointly.
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