6 results on '"Goldey, Katherine L."'
Search Results
2. Strategizing to Make Pornography Worthwhile: A Qualitative Exploration of Women's Agentic Engagement with Sexual Media.
- Author
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Chadwick, Sara B., Raisanen, Jessica C., Goldey, Katherine L., and van Anders, Sari
- Subjects
PORNOGRAPHY ,SEX videos ,SEXUAL excitement ,GENDER identity ,HUMAN sexuality - Abstract
Women often expect to encounter negative, problematic content when they consume pornography, yet many women use and enjoy pornography anyway. Some research has centered content type (e.g., sexist/violent vs. nonsexist/women-focused) as a key determinant of women's pornography experiences, but this precludes the notion that women are active, engaged consumers of pornography and minimizes women's role in shaping their own experiences. In the present study, we explored how a sample of sexually diverse women in the U.S. (aged 18-64; N = 73) worked toward positive experiences with pornography via active negotiation with negative content, using a secondary analysis of focus group data on women's sexual pleasure. We found that, although women often experienced pornography as risky, many women used it anyway and actively employed strategies to increase the likelihood of having a positive experience. Women's strategies were similar across sexual identity and age groups, but the heteronormative, youth-oriented portrayals of sexuality in mainstream pornography presented unique concerns for heterosexual, queer, and older women. Results have implications for how women can be conceptualized as active, rather than passive, consumers of pornography as well as for how women's agency might influence women's arousal responses to sexually explicit stimuli in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
3. Sexual Desire in Sexual Minority and Majority Women and Men: The Multifaceted Sexual Desire Questionnaire.
- Author
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Chadwick, Sara, Burke, Shannon, Goldey, Katherine, Bell, Sarah, Anders, Sari, Chadwick, Sara B, Burke, Shannon M, Goldey, Katherine L, Bell, Sarah N, and van Anders, Sari M
- Subjects
QUESTIONNAIRES ,LUST ,SEXUAL minorities ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,SEXUAL psychology ,SOCIAL location - Abstract
Sexual desire is increasingly understood to be multifaceted and not solely erotically oriented, but measures are still generally unitary and eroticism-focused. Our goals in this article were to explore the multifaceted nature of sexual desire and develop a measure to do so, and to determine how multifaceted sexual desire might be related to gender/sex and sexual orientation/identity. In the development phase, we generated items to form the 65-item Sexual Desire Questionnaire (DESQ). Next, the DESQ was administered to 609 women, 705 men, and 39 non-binary identified participants. Results showed that the DESQ demonstrated high reliability and validity, and that sexual desire was neither unitary nor entirely erotic, but instead was remarkably multifaceted. We also found that multifaceted sexual desire was in part related to social location variables such as gender/sex and sexual orientation/identity. We propose the DESQ as a measure of multifaceted sexual desire that can be used to compare factor themes, total scores, and scores across individual items in diverse groups that take social context into account. Results are discussed in light of how social location variables should be considered when making generalizations about sexual desire, and how conceptualizations of desire as multifaceted may provide important insights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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4. Multifaceted Sexual Desire and Hormonal Associations: Accounting for Social Location, Relationship Status, and Desire Target.
- Author
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Chadwick, Sara, Burke, Shannon, Goldey, Katherine, Anders, Sari, Chadwick, Sara B, Burke, Shannon M, Goldey, Katherine L, and van Anders, Sari M
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PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of sex hormones ,LUST ,TESTOSTERONE ,HYDROCORTISONE ,SOCIAL location ,RELATIONSHIP status ,HORMONES ,PSYCHOANALYTIC interpretation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SALIVA ,HUMAN sexuality ,SOCIAL skills ,SEXUAL partners ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Sexual desire is typically measured as a unitary erotic phenomenon and is often assumed by biological and biomedical researchers, as well as the lay public, to be directly connected to physiological parameters like testosterone (T). In the present study, we empirically examined how conceptualizing sexual desire as multifaceted might clarify associations with T and contextual variables. To do so, we used the Sexual Desire Questionnaire (DESQ), which assesses multifaceted dyadic sexual desire, to explore how contextual variables such as social location, relationship status, and desire target (e.g., partner vs. stranger) might be meaningful for reports of sexual desire and associated hormonal correlations. We focused on women (N = 198), because sexual desire and testosterone are generally unlinked in healthy men. Participants imagined a partner or stranger while answering the 65 DESQ items and provided a saliva sample for hormone assay. Analyses showed that the DESQ factored differently for the current sample than in previous research, highlighting how sexual desire can be constructed differently across different populations. We also found that, for the Intimacy, Eroticism, and Partner Focus factors, mean scores were higher when the desire target was a partner relative to a stranger for participants in a relationship, but equally high between partner versus stranger target for single participants. DESQ items resolved into meaningful hormonal desire components, such that high endorsement of Fantasy Experience was linked to higher T, and higher cortisol was linked with lower endorsement of the Intimacy factor. We argue that conceptualizing desire as multifaceted and contextualized when assessing hormonal links-or questions in general about desire-can clarify some of its complexities and lead to new research avenues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Identification with Stimuli Moderates Women's Affective and Testosterone Responses to Self-Chosen Erotica.
- Author
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Goldey, Katherine, Anders, Sari, Goldey, Katherine L, and van Anders, Sari M
- Subjects
TESTOSTERONE ,SEXUAL excitement ,SEXUAL psychology ,SEXUAL response cycle ,WOMEN'S sexual behavior ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,AROUSAL (Physiology) ,EMOTIONS ,GUILT (Psychology) ,PORNOGRAPHY ,SALIVA ,SELF-evaluation ,HUMAN sexuality ,SHAME ,THOUGHT & thinking - Abstract
Sexual thoughts are sufficient to increase testosterone (T) in women, yet erotic films are not. A key confound in past studies is autonomy in stimulus selection: women choose the content of their sexual thoughts but films have been selected by researchers. We hypothesized that self-chosen erotic films, compared to researcher-chosen erotic films, would (1) increase women's self-reported arousal, enjoyment, and identification with stimuli, and decrease negative affect; and (2) increase T. Participants (N = 116 women) were randomly assigned to a neutral documentary condition or one of three erotic film conditions: high choice (self-chosen erotica from participants' own sources), moderate choice (self-chosen erotica from films preselected by sexuality researchers), or no choice (researcher-chosen erotica). Participants provided saliva samples for T before and after viewing the film in the privacy of their homes. Compared to researcher-chosen erotica, self-chosen erotica increased self-reported arousal and enjoyment, but also unexpectedly disgust, guilt, and embarrassment. Self-chosen erotica only marginally increased identification with stimuli compared to researcher-chosen erotica. Overall, film condition did not affect T, but individual differences in identification moderated T responses: among women reporting lower levels of identification, the moderate choice condition decreased T compared to the no choice condition, but this difference was not observed among women with higher identification. These results highlight the importance of cognitive/emotional factors like identification for sexually modulated T. However, self-chosen erotica results in more ambivalent rather than unequivocally positive cognitive/emotional responses, perhaps because stigma associated with viewing erotica for women becomes more salient when choosing stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Defining Pleasure: A Focus Group Study of Solitary and Partnered Sexual Pleasure in Queer and Heterosexual Women.
- Author
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Goldey, Katherine, Posh, Amanda, Bell, Sarah, Anders, Sari, Goldey, Katherine L, Posh, Amanda R, Bell, Sarah N, and van Anders, Sari M
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SEXUAL excitement ,WOMEN'S sexual behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,ORGASM ,FEMALE masturbation ,FOCUS groups ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MASTURBATION ,PLEASURE ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,SEXUAL partners - Abstract
Solitary and partnered sexuality are typically depicted as fundamentally similar, but empirical evidence suggests they differ in important ways. We investigated how women's definitions of sexual pleasure overlapped and diverged when considering solitary versus partnered sexuality. Based on an interdisciplinary literature, we explored whether solitary pleasure would be characterized by eroticism (e.g., genital pleasure, orgasm) and partnered pleasure by nurturance (e.g., closeness). Via focus groups with a sexually diverse sample of women aged 18-64 (N = 73), we found that women defined solitary and partnered pleasure in both convergent and divergent ways that supported expectations. Autonomy was central to definitions of solitary pleasure, whereas trust, giving pleasure, and closeness were important elements of partnered pleasure. Both solitary and partnered pleasure involved exploration for self-discovery or for growing a partnered relationship. Definitions of pleasure were largely similar across age and sexual identity; however, relative to queer women, heterosexual women (especially younger heterosexual women) expressed greater ambivalence toward solitary masturbation and partnered orgasm. Results have implications for women's sexual well-being across multiple sexual identities and ages, and for understanding solitary and partnered sexuality as overlapping but distinct constructs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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