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Psyc 3533 Final Exam tutorial

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Title: Psyc 3533 Final Exam tutorial


1
Psyc 3533Final Exam tutorial
2
Sexual Coercion
  • Canadian terminology
  • Sexual assault
  • Rape and other unwanted, imposed physical sex
    (e.g. kissing, groping, etc.)
  • Rape
  • Non-consensual penetration

3
Sexual Coercion
  • Mostly known to victim
  • 95-98 of these acts perpetrated by men
  • Non-consensual sex highest in non-egalitarian
    societies
  • Sociocultural context
  • Glorification of violence
  • Sexual scripts
  • Men assertive and initiate sex
  • Women passive gatekeepers

4
Sexual Coercion
  • Early family influences
  • Sexual aggressor likely to have been abused
  • Peer group
  • Abusive friends
  • Situation
  • Secluded places
  • Alcohol

5
Sexual Coercion
  • Miscommunication
  • Friendly vs. Sexually attracted
  • Power Motives
  • Sex and power motives interact
  • Norms and attitudes
  • Hypermasculinity

6
Sexual Coercion
  • 4 Theoretical views
  • Victim-precipitated
  • She was asking for it
  • Psychopathology
  • Offenders are sick
  • Feminist
  • Gender inequality (cause and result)
  • Social disorganization
  • Community cannot enforce norms

7
Sexual Coercion
  • Commonalities (Canadian Research)
  • Sensation seeking
  • Early history of behavioural problems
  • High levels of hostility
  • Poor sexual adjustment
  • Serious problems with alcohol (often families)
  • Abused as children, as adults identify with the
    aggressor role
  • Inability to express emotions
  • Use of pornography during childhood and
    adolescence (violence and sex)

8
Sexual Coercion
  • Sexual harassment
  • Non-verbal
  • Suggestive sounds, obscene gestures, extreme
    leering
  • Most common, least recognized.
  • Verbal
  • Suggestions or requests for sex, comments on
    body, attire, use of crude language to refer to
    persons body parts, functions, showing porno.

9
Sexual Coercion
  • Physical
  • Unnecessary touching, grasping, cornering,
    hugging, kissing without consent or encouragement
  • Least common, most recognized.
  • Effects
  • Depression
  • Illness
  • Insomnia
  • Absenteeism.

10
Sexual Coercion
  • Can be confused with socially accepted scripts
  • Shes playing hard to get but she wants it as
    much as I do, shell come around if I dont let
    up
  • Confusion
  • Culture teaches women to play hard to get
  • Hard to know when its not an act if the other
    person is insensitive or has poor social skills

11
Sexual Coercion
  • Date rape
  • Alcohol consensual or not.
  • Drugs consensual or not.
  • Rohypnol. GHB
  • Epidemic on many North American campuses
  • BC study 27 sexual assaults involved these
    drugs
  • In a survey, 76 of college males said they would
    rape if they could get away with it.

12
Sexual Coercion
  • Child Sexual Abuse
  • Very widespread
  • Hard to get accurate figures
  • Sometimes entire communities
  • Mt. Cashel
  • Most common family friend, relative
  • Occupations with kids
  • daycare
  • school
  • scouts
  • sports

13
Sexual Coercion
  • Pedophilia
  • Adult who likes to have sex with children
  • Pederasty
  • A (usually erotic) relationship between an older
    man and an adolescent boy outside his immediate
    family
  • Some believe children are capable of consensual
    sex, and of enjoying it
  • Prostitution and pornography.
  • Sex tourism, e.g. Thailand, Philippines.
  • Web child pornography.

14
Sexual Coercion
  • Legally, a child cannot consent to sexual
    activity. (To age 14). ANY sexual activity
    between adult and child is considered abusive.
    Sexual activities
  • exhibitionism
  • kissing
  • fondling
  • sexual touching
  • oral sex
  • vaginal intercourse
  • anal intercourse

15
Sexual Coercion
  • Between 14 and 17 consent is possible if
  • there is no relationship of trust, authority or
    dependency
  • there is no payment or offer of payment
  • there is no anal intercourse
  • About 90 of child sexual abuse is not reported.

16
Sexual Coercion
  • Consequences for victims
  • anxiety
  • PTSS
  • depression
  • low self-esteem
  • psychosomatic illness
  • aggression
  • abnormal interest in sex
  • school problems
  • sleep problems, nightmares
  • more vulnerable to subsequent abuse
  • Lowest risk assertive child

17
Sexual Coercion
  • Womens role as sexual abusers rare
  • Three types of female abusers described
    (Matthews)
  • male coerced
  • teacher/lover
  • predisposed
  • One difference with male abusers apparent lack
    of sexual arousal, more like self-hatred, hatred
    of own body and of femininity.

18
Sexual Coercion
  • Repressed and recovered memories of abuse
  • False memory syndrome (E. Loftus)
  • Dissociation
  • Defends from pain and helps to comply with
    secrecy (usually threats)
  • Facilitates continued interaction with abuser in
    normal circumstances.
  • Abuser can be dissociated into two different
    people 1) very good and 2) very evil.

19
Definitions
  • The scientific study of homosexuality
  • Frequency
  • Who is?
  • Need a definition
  • Self-label
  • Behaviour
  • How often?
  • When?
  • Tea room men, Indonesian men
  • Causes

20
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21
Definitions
  • Kinsey
  • 37 of all males had at least one same sex
    experience to orgasm in adulthood
  • 1 10 of the population
  • Canadian Community Health Survey
  • National Health and Life Styles Survey
  • Twice as many men as women

22
Definitions
  • Bisexuality
  • 33 - if based on one encounter
  • More sexual activity in general, including
    masturbation.
  • More high risk behaviour
  • Majority married (heterorole)
  • Sexual pleasure oriented

23
Definitions
  • Danger
  • 71 of bisexual men do not tell their female
    partners
  • STDs AIDS
  • Adolescent males
  • Very common transitional stage
  • Difficulty
  • Rejected by both hetero and homo

24
Attitudes
  • Heterosexism
  • Heterosexual normal
  • Homophobia
  • Strong, irrational fears of homosexuals
  • Homonegativity
  • Negative attitudes and behaviors toward
    homosexuals
  • Cultural attitude based on religious teachings

25
Research
  • Adams, Wright and Lohr (1996) gave test to
    measure homophobia to male college students
  • Group 1 high scores
  • Group 2 low scores
  • All participants were hooked to plethysmograph
    that measured erection
  • They all watched film clips of hetero, gay and
    lesbian sex
  • Group 1 54 had increased penile errection
  • Group 2 24 had increased penile circumference

26
Gender Differences
  • In an experiment heterosexual and homosexual
    males and females watched videos of
  • Heterosexual sex
  • Male gay sex
  • Lesbian sex
  • Nude males
  • Nude females
  • Bonobos having sex
  • The participants were hooked to a plethysmograph
    and were asked to report verbally when they were
    aroused

27
Gender Differences
  • Heterosexual males became aroused when watching
  • Heterosexual sex
  • Lesbian sex
  • Nude females
  • Homosexual males became aroused when watching
  • Male homosexual sex
  • Nude males
  • 100 concordance between plethysmograph results
    and self report

28
Gender Differences
  • Both heterosexual and homosexual women were
    aroused by all the videos according to the
    plethysmograph
  • Self reports were at odds with objective data
  • Women are not aware when they are aroused
  • Another gender difference
  • More women self-label bisexual than males
  • More women switch sexual orientation over their
    life times

29
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Possible variables involved
  • Genes
  • Hormones in utero
  • Subtle intrauterine interactions
  • Brain timing
  • Early influences
  • Identity problems
  • Social stereotypes, prejudice

30
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Cannot look for THE cause
  • INTERACTIONS
  • Individual differences in etiology
  • Circumstances
  • Jail, boarding school
  • Cross-cultural evidence
  • Prescribed homosexuality at certain age-stage
  • Definition found in many cultures
  • gay man is the one that is penetrated

31
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Genetic
  • Twin Studies

Monozygotic Dizygotic Adopted
Genetic Similarity 100 50 0
Concordance Rate 52 22 11
32
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Sociological theories
  • Importance of labels
  • Labels affect perception
  • Perception affects behaviour
  • This can influence self-perception
  • Leading to self-labelling.

33
Development of Sexual Orientation
  • Reiss
  • Negative pathway
  • Rigidly polarized societies have higher incidence
    of male-male sex
  • High maternal involvement Low paternal
  • Little opportunity to learn
  • Positive pathway
  • Very permissive societies
  • Experimentation OK.

34
Bem The Exotic Becomes Erotic
Boys more active and aggressive
Different exotic
35
Bems Theory Criticisms
  • There is NO abundant evidence of inborn
    aggression and activity levels by gender
  • Contaminated by culture.
  • Homosocial activities are mostly a cultural
    phenomenon.
  • Children who dont fit the gender stereotypes are
    clearly told they are odd and wrong.

36
Bems Theory Criticisms
  • Many gays are gender typical in their
    interests, appearance, etc. Bem fell for the
    effeminate guy/macho woman stereotype of gays.
  • Many atypical (i.e., boys who played with dolls,
    girls who played with trucks) kids do not go on
    to become gay.

37
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Sample of 979
  • Close coupled
  • One long-time partner
  • Marriage type relationship
  • Few problems
  • Few sex partners
  • Infrequent cruising

38
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Open coupled
  • steady live-in partner
  • Also many outside partners
  • Frequent cruising
  • More likely to have problems
  • More likely to regret being gay

39
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Functional
  • Not coupled
  • High number of sex partners
  • Few problems
  • Younger
  • High sex drive
  • Few regrets

40
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Dysfunctional
  • Not coupled
  • High number of partners
  • Many sex and psychological problems
  • Tense
  • Unhappy
  • Depressed

41
Bell and Weinberg Typology
  • Asexual
  • Low in sexual interest and activity
  • Less exclusively gay
  • Very secretive
  • Loners
  • Highest incidence of suicidal thoughts

42
Bell, Weinberg and Hammersmith
  • In depth interviews comparing gays/ lesbians and
    straights.
  • No support for psychoanalytic, learning or
    sociological (labelling) theories.
  • They speculate a biological basis but have no
    data.

43
Menopause
  • A natural, normal physiological change.
  • Permanent cessation of menstruation.
  • Complex interaction of domains
  • Physical
  • Social
  • Psychological
  • Cultural
  • Spiritual

44
Menopause
  • Climacteric (perimenopause)
  • Long transition period leading to menopause
  • 35-60
  • ovaries less and less responsive to FSH
  • decline of estrogen and progesterone production
  • anovulatory cycles, periods less blood, shorter
  • less testosterone
  • Menopause
  • 12 continuous months without a period

45
Menopause
  • Some estrogen and progesterone produced by
  • Adrenal glands
  • Skin
  • Muscle
  • Brain
  • Pineal gland
  • Hair follicles
  • These hormones stored in fatty tissue

46
Menopause
  • Universal signs of menopause
  • cessation of menses
  • cessation of ovulation
  • decreased hormonal output
  • vaginal dryness
  • skin changes
  • Non-universal changes
  • hot flashes
  • tachycardia
  • headaches
  • memory lapses
  • fatigue
  • irritability
  • depression

47
Menopause
  • Associated medical conditions
  • Osteoporosis (brittle bones)
  • Bones lack calcium
  • No correlation between amount of Ca2 in diet and
    incidence of osteoporosis
  • excess of protein in the diet results in Ca2
    loss during metabolism.
  • Heart Disease

48
Menopause
  • Osteoporosis
  • Bones lack calcium
  • No correlation between amount of Ca2 in diet and
    incidence of osteoporosis
  • excess of protein in the diet results in Ca2
    loss during metabolism.
  • Women 1 in 4, men 1 in 8 (no estrogen
    deprivation in men)
  • Prevention
  • Muscle mass helps to prevent osteoporosis.
  • good diet, phytoestrogens
  • no smoking

49
Menopause
  • Heart Disease
  • Uncommon until 20th century
  • Longevity
  • womens life expectancy from 48 to 84.
  • Genetics and Lifestyle

50
Menopause
  • Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
  • Completely discredited today
  • HRT can cause
  • reproductive cancers
  • heart disease
  • dementias
  • asthma
  • hearing loss
  • memory loss
  • and other health problems

51
Menopause
  • Psycho-Socio-Cultural Aspects of Menopause
  • Associated with loss of status for women
  • Aging seen as loss of value
  • Fear of Aging Associated With Menopause Causes
  • negative expectations
  • negative thoughts and emotions
  • defeatist behaviours

52
Menopause
  • Androcentric Image of Women
  • sexy
  • young
  • fertile
  • Post-Menopausal women
  • dry
  • withered
  • unattractive

53
Menopause
  • Some Cultures Associate Menopause with
  • power
  • wisdom
  • high social status
  • leadership roles
  • respect
  • In these cultures women have few complaints about
    menopause

54
Menopause
  • Menopause and Sex
  • 50 report more enjoyment
  • no fear of pregnancy
  • partners slower
  • more self-assured
  • Use of artificial lubricants
  • Vagina
  • use it or lose it (atrophy)

55
Andropause
  • Male Climacteric
  • 40-55
  • Some real physical changes
  • Less obvious than women
  • Confounded with normal aging changes
  • less energy
  • slower RT (reaction time)
  • less vigorous responses

56
Andropause
  • Testosterone Drops
  • testosterone maintains muscle, stimulates bone
    health, so less testosterone leads to reduced
    muscle mass and weaker bones.
  • Sperm Count
  • also affected (drops) due to testosterone drop.

57
Andropause
  • Sexual Performance Declines
  • increased episodes of impotence
  • genitals shrink, prostate enlarges
  • more time to reach arousal
  • erections less hard
  • ejaculations less forceful, less quantity
  • increased refractory period

58
Andropause
  • Estrogen Drops
  • estrogen helps cardiac health, prevents
    atherosclerosis, counteracts LDL cholesterol, so
    less estrogen increases probability of
    atherosclerosis (arterial plaque) and of bad
    cholesterol.

59
Andropause
  • HRT for Men
  • Testosterone
  • Can cause
  • prostate cancer
  • prostate enlargement
  • blood clots
  • lower HDL (the good cholesterol)
  • heart disease
  • Same prevention
  • lifestyle

60
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Women 43
  • Men 30
  • Young Women mostly psychosocial
  • Old Men mostly organic

61
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Drugs that affect sexual response
  • antidepressants
  • antipsychotics
  • tranquilizers
  • alcohol
  • heroin
  • morphine
  • cocaine
  • marijuana

62
Sexual Dysfuntion
63
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Erectile dysfunction
  • Can be primary or secondary
  • premature ejaculation 29
  • male orgasmic disorder

64
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Female orgasmic disorder
  • Primary and secondary 25-35
  • Arousal disorder (menopause)
  • Dyspareunia
  • Painful intercourse
  • Vaginismus
  • Spasms of the vagina
  • Penetration impossible

65
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Vulvodynia
  • Chronic irritation, burning, soreness of the
    vulva
  • Without contact
  • Vulvar vestibulitis
  • Pain inside labia minora, introitus
  • Contact (penis, tampon, toy)

66
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • hypoactive sexual desire little interest in sex
  • males 16
  • females 33
  • sexual aversion disorder
  • males 8
  • females 21

67
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Organic Causes of Erectile Disorder
  • circulatory problems
  • heart disease
  • diabetes (38)
  • medications (e.g., for hypertension)
  • alcohol, short and long term
  • recreational drugs

68
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Some causes of painful intercourse or
  • dyspareunia women14-15 (vs. males
  • 3)
  • Introitus scars
  • Vaginal infections and STDs
  • Uterine or vaginal prolapse
  • Cancer
  • PID (pelvic inflammatory disease)
  • Endometriosis
  • Cysts
  • Insufficient lubrication
  • Not enough foreplay

69
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Psychological causes
  • anxiety
  • fear of sex
  • fear of failure
  • inability to let go (cognitive)
  • spectatoring
  • interpersonal problems
  • depression interferes with sexual desire and
    orgasmic capacity
  • antidepressants

70
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Biological factors
  • testosterone deficiencies
  • hyper or hypothyroidism
  • temporal lobe epilepsy
  • circulatory system pathology or neurological
    problems
  • Multiple Sclerosis (leads to male orgasmic
    disorder)
  • inadequate lubrication (leads to dyspareunia)
  • vaginal infections and STDs (leads to
    dyspareunia)
  • prolapsed uterus
  • cervical cancer

71
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • endometriosis and PID
  • diabetes
  • spinal cord injuries
  • antihypertension drugs
  • kidney disease
  • emphysema

72
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Masters and Johnsons Sex Therapy
  • acceptance of mutual responsibility
  • sexual dysfunction a couples problem
  • no blame attached
  • elimination of performance demands and anxiety
  • sexual intercourse prohibited during the therapy

73
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Therapeutic steps for anorgasmic women
  • Education, information
  • Self exploration
  • Kegels (PC Muscle)
  • Self-touching and self-stimulation. Masturbation
  • Assertive thoughts, giving self permission
  • Use of fantasy, books, video, audiotapes
  • Focus on sensations, not on goal
  • Bring in partner. Nondemanding sensate focus
    exercises no intercourse
  • Partner stimulates women manually or orally to
    orgasm following her directions
  • Intercourse when she is ready

74
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Biological treatments for erectile dysfunction
  • Surgery to unblock vessels that supply blood to
    penis
  • Hormones testosterone, if abnormally low (men
    and women) MIGHT help
  • Injections muscle relaxants, into corpus
    cavernosum. Allows blood vessel muscles to relax
    and blood flows in
  • Suppositories muscle relaxant into penis
  • Vacuum pump increases blood flow into penis
  • Penile implants permanent

75
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Pills
  • Viagra (sildenafil)
  • Vasomax (phentolamine) relax blood vessel muscles
  • Spontane (apomorphine) works at brain level to
    trigger erection
  • Cialis (tadalafil)

76
Sexual Dysfuntion
  • Side effects of Viagra (dose dependent)
  • headaches
  • flushing
  • indigestion
  • nasal congestion
  • visual distortions
  • drug interactions
  • dizziness
  • eye pain
  • hearing loss
  • allergic reactions
  • Vasomax fewer side effects (?)
  • must be bought by prescription, due to danger of
    heart attacks.
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