Monday, July 21, 2008

High Sex Drive is Associated with Increased Sexual Attraction to Both Women and Men

In my private practice and coaching I have noticed that straight men with a higher sex drive tend to be more willing to be sexual with other men which this study by Richard Lippa talks about. I have also noticed that gay men with high sex drives are more willing to have sex with women and can be satisfied with them.

I wrote about men with high sex drives at joekort.com in an article called, "Are you a sexually high T or low T?" and "Am I a sex addict or a high T?"

This study is important as it is not about sexual orientation as much as it is about sexual drive and behavior.

____________________________________________________________

Information about the sex drive and same- and other-sex attraction study
in the April 2007 issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior


The complete reference for the article is:

Lippa, R. A. (2007). The relation between sex drive and sexual attraction to men and women: A cross-national study of heterosexual, bisexual, and homosexual men and women, Archives of Sexual Behavior, 36, 209-222.

Abstract:
Recent research suggests that, for most women, high sex drive is associated with increased sexual attraction to both women and men. For men, however, high sex drive is associated with increased attraction to one sex or the other, but not to both, depending on men's sexual orientation (Lippa, R. A., 2006, Psychological Science, 17, 46–52).

These findings were replicated in a very large BBC data set and were found to hold true in different nations, world regions, and age groups. Consistent with previous research, lesbians differed from other women in showing the male-typical pattern, that high sex drive is associated with attraction to one sex but not the other. Bisexual women and men were more similar to same-sex heterosexuals than to same-sex homosexuals in their pattern of results.

The correlation between same-sex and other-sex attraction was consistently negative for men, was near zero for heterosexual and bisexual women, and negative for lesbians. Thus, same-sex and other-sex attractions were, in general, more bipolar and mutually exclusive for men than for women. The current findings add to evidence that sexual orientation is organized differently in women and men and suggest a biological component to this difference.

A brief description of the study:
The higher women’s sex drive, the more they desire both sexes. However, the higher men’s sex drive, the more they desire either one sex or the other, depending on their sexual orientation. These are some of the findings presented in a new study by California State University psychology professor, Richard A. Lippa, published in the April 2007 issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior. The findings were based on data collected from over 200,000 people who responded to an Internet survey posted on the BBC Science and Nature website.

For most men, a higher sex drive simply intensifies their existing sexual orientation, Lippa reported. The common-sense view is that heterosexual men with high sex drives are very interested in women, and gay men with high sex drives are very interested in men, and this is indeed what the BBC data showed. The unexpected result was that women seem to be more intrinsically bisexual in their sexual attractions. Whereas men tended to be either-or (heterosexual or gay), women had more shades of gray.

Lippa, a prominent gender researcher, said that the data from the BBC Internet survey suggests that the observed differences between women and men may have biological causes, because the results were very consistent across a number of countries, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, India, Malaysia, and Japan. Results were also consistent across a number of world regions, including Western Europe, Eastern Europe, and Latin America, and they were equally true for people over and under 30 years of age.

Lippa’s analyses of the BBC data showed that most women were considerably more attracted to men than to women, and thus it is incorrect to label most women as “bisexual.” However, many more women than men expressed some degree of attraction to their own sex. In the BBC survey data, 90 percent of women labeled themselves as heterosexual, 7 percent as bisexual, and 3 percent as lesbian. In contrast, 91 percent of men labeled themselves as heterosexual, 4 percent as bisexual, and 5 percent as gay. Thus, nearly twice as many women as men identified themselves as bisexual, but almost twice as many men as women labeled themselves as homosexual.

Lesbians were the only group of women who did not show the "high sex drive leads to increased attraction to both sexes" effect. Instead, they showed the pattern typical of heterosexual men. For lesbian women, high sex drive was associated with increased attraction to women, but not to men. Why lesbians differed from other women is not clear. Lippa speculated that the difference might result from the effects of prenatal hormones, particularly androgens, which include male hormones such as testosterone. Some social scientists argue that sexual orientation is influenced by prenatal variations in sex hormones like testosterone.

Lippa served as a research consultant to the BBC Internet survey, which was developed for use in the BBC documentary Secrets of the Sexes. He is a Professor of Psychology at California State University, Fullerton.

This article appeared in a special section of the April 2007 issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior, guest edited by Richard Lippa, devoted to studies that analyzed data from the 2005 BBC Internet survey. Results from this survey were presented in the BBC One documentary, Secrets of the Sexes. About a quarter of a million people across the world responded to the BBC survey, which investigated psychological sex differences--how men and women differ in their cognitive abilities, personality traits, sexual attitudes and behavior, mate preferences, and attitudes. For further information about the BBC studies and their results, see the BBC Science and Nature website.






10 comments:

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

I always hate these so-called "studies" because they are rife with blanket statements. Nobody surveyed me, that's for sure. LOL

I'm a heterosexual female with a high sex drive, and I am 100% attracted to men only. I've honestly never even felt a twinge of attraction to other females. I don't even enjoy being friends with most of them; they annoy the hell out of me.

Looks as if this study doesn't take women like me into consideration. What else is new? Sometimes I wonder if they don't just alter the results to make it look more socially acceptable.

Jest de Fax said...

The introduction asserts that a high sex drive makes men more likely to have sex with other men. But the Lippa study cited contradicts that. The study reported that a high sex drive made straight guys more likely to seek out more women and gay men seek out more gay guys. Did anyone really read it?

Dr. Joe Kort said...

Jest de Fax,

Yes I know of the Lippa Study and what he found in his research was true for those men. The study did not address what men do when women are *not* available. In my clinical practice as well as other clinicians I have talked to around the country we find that men turn to both men and women when there is a high sex drive. The sample we see might be smaller than what Lippa found however it doesn't mean it isn't true.

Thanks for adding to the discussion.

Jest de Fax said...

Quoting from your summary above of the Lippa study "The higher women’s sex drive, the more they desire both sexes. However, the higher men’s sex drive, the more they desire either one sex or the other, depending on their sexual orientation. These are some of the findings presented in a new study by California State University psychology professor, Richard A. Lippa, published in the April 2007 issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior." That seems to be a flat-out contradiction to your experience. Is it possible that the high sex drive was a symptom or coping strategy rather than the root cause?

Anonymous said...

I think this study is pure nonsense and grants absolution to people who have no interest in controlling their impulses.

Everyone has a high sex drive, the human race would have died out long ago if we did not. Some people share it selectively with those they care about rather than having a "wet spaghetti" approach of throwing themselves at whomever they find they can stick to.

Unknown said...

so if a high sex drive make straight guys more likely to seek out more women and gay men seek out more gay guys, does it mean that men with a low to medium sex drive are more likely to be bisexual and seek out both sexes?

jason said...

Men want sex more often than women at the start of a relationship in the middle of it and after many years and Men are more likely to seek sex even when it is frowned upon or even outlawed

libido

Unknown said...

Agreed - my sex drive is very high and although I consider myself to be heterosexual - at a times of heightened arousal, I could easily go both ways. For instance if I am watching pornography (male/female) as usual, I will sometimes switch up to (male/male) for the thrill of it - just to push my limits. Once in a while it is just more thrilling... my partner (female) understands and encourages this..

Anonymous said...

I agree that high sex drive makes men more "bisexual". That's why men who would never have gay sex under normal conditions, will have it under the effects of drugs, alcohol, or when sexually-deprivated. Because those things heighten libido.
I guess that Lippa's study failed to see the correlation between high libido and bisexual tendencies in men, because the study was highly subjective. He asked the participants about their "attraction" to people of the same-sex. But "attraction" is too vague, and men tend to be much more self-delusional than women about these subjects.
Even men who have actual sex with other men will often deny any real attraction to them.

If Lippa had asked about actual same-sex experiences, I'm sure that he would have found a strong correlation between high libido and bisexual tendencies in men (probably stronger than among women).
This is simply because you can't deny a "fact", as a sexual encounter, without realizing that it's a blatant lie, but you can easily make up excuses for something as subjective as "attraction".