Journal Article10.1177/0146167213490963
Getting It On Versus Getting It Over With: Sexual Motivation, Desire, and Satisfaction in Intimate Bonds
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TL;DR: Across three studies, it is demonstrated that pursuing sex for approach goals, such as to enhance intimacy, fuels satisfaction and pursuingsex for avoidance goals,such as to avoid disappointing a partner, detracts from satisfaction.
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Abstract: Across three studies, we demonstrate that pursuing sex for approach goals, such as to enhance intimacy, fuels satisfaction and pursuing sex for avoidance goals, such as to avoid disappointing a partner, detracts from satisfaction. In Study 1, we use hypothetical scenarios to provide experimental support for the associations between sexual goals and sexual and relationship satisfaction. In Study 2, a dyadic daily experience study of dating couples, we demonstrate that daily sexual goals are associated with both partners' daily relationship and sexual satisfaction. In Study 3, a dyadic daily experience study, we replicate the daily associations between sexual goals and satisfaction in a sample of long-term couples, and demonstrate that sexual goals impact partner's relationship and sexual quality 4 months later. In all studies, the associations between sexual goals and enhanced satisfaction as reported by both partners were mediated by sexual desire. Implications for research on sexual motivation and close relationships are discussed.
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The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States
TL;DR: This survey of sexual practices in the United States has been combed by the media for items of interest to the public: monogamous sex is much more widespread in this country than has been thought.
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TL;DR: Research strongly supports the routine clinical investigation of psychological factors, partner-related factors, context, and life stressors and a biopsychosocial model to understand how these factors predispose to sexual dysfunction is recommended.
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Beyond happiness: Building a science of discrete positive emotions.
Michelle N. Shiota,Belinda Campos,Christopher Oveis,Matthew J. Hertenstein,Emiliana Simon-Thomas,Dacher Keltner +5 more
TL;DR: The positive emotions are best described as branches of a “family tree” emerging from a common ancestor mediating adaptive management of fitness-critical resources (e.g., food) and a new theoretical framework is offered that accounts for core features as well as mechanisms for differentiation is offered.
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Communal motivation and well-being in interpersonal relationships: An integrative review and meta-analysis.
TL;DR: Findings from the current meta-analysis suggest that care for the welfare of others is linked to greater relationship well-being for both members of a relationship, however, communal care is only linked to personalWell-being insofar as it is mitigated by a degree of self-oriented concern.
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Intimately connected: The importance of partner responsiveness for experiencing sexual desire.
Gurit E. Birnbaum,Harry T. Reis,Moran Mizrahi,Yaniv Kanat-Maymon,Omri Sass,Chen Granovski-Milner +5 more
TL;DR: Feeling special and perceived partner mate value explained the responsiveness-desire link, suggesting that responsive partners were seen as making one feel valued as well as better potential mates for anyone and thus as more sexually desirable.
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References
Appraisal and control of sexual and non-sexual intrusive thoughts in university students.
TL;DR: Thought-action fusion likelihood was a significant unique predictor of the perceived controllability of respondents' most upsetting sexual and non-sexual intrusive thought, whereas worry that one might act on an intrusive thought and greater effort to control the intrusion were significant unique predictors of the control of non- sexual intrusive thoughts.
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The role of sexual desire and sexual activity in dating relationships
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine empirically whether sexual desire and sexual activity co-occur in dating relationships, and whether desire is more strongly associated than activity with passionate love.
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Sexual Frequency and the Stability of Marital and Cohabiting Unions
TL;DR: In this article, the role of sexual activity in the dissolution of cohabiting unions was examined using the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 5,902).
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