Read Why Women Have Sex Online
Authors: Cindy M. Meston,David M. Buss
sexual anxiety,
139
sexual arousal
anxiety and,
245–46
exercise and,
246–47
psychological,
xiv–xv
SNS activation and,
247–48
touch and,
29–31
sexual attraction,
1
to a certain “type” of person,
26–27
facial features and,
12–16
fame/power and,
23–25
familiarity and,
3–5
fertility and,
9
height and,
10–11
high shoulder-to-hip ratio and,
11–12
kissing and,
68–69
personality and,
19–23
physical movement and,
17–19
scents and,
5–8
voice pitch and,
16–17
sexual bartering,
167–70
implicit forms of,
180–83
prostitution (
see
prostitution
)
in traditional societies,
187–89
sexual compatability,
155–57
sexual competition
celebrity media coverage and,
81
conquest and,
87–89
for high-status partners,
91–92
jealousy and,
xvii–xviii
,
99
,
104
mate poaching and,
92–97
ovulation cycles and,
83–85
sexual reputation and,
85–87
on television shows,
78–79
sexual conflict theory,
212–14
sexual deception,
212–18
sexual desire
during and after pregnancy,
126–29
factors in diminishment of,
123–26
gender differences in,
121–23
neutrality and,
143–44
partner’ sexual skills and,
132–33
peak in women,
159
prescription drugs and,
129–30
and psychological fusion in lesbian couples,
134–35
sexual double standards,
86–87
sexual economics
gender and,
171–73
See also
sexual bartering
sexual enslavement/trafficking,
175–76
sexual functioning
body image and,
195–96
depression and,
250–51
sexual intercourse
to achieve a sense of power,
204–7
to burn calories,
256–57
curiosity and,
152–55
depression and,
251–56
to improve sexual skills,
157–61
nonconsensual (
see
rape
;
sexual abuse
)
as a relationship screening test,
155–57
to relieve menstrual cramps,
239–40
for revenge,
97–98
as a sleep aid,
244–45
unwanted (
see
unwanted sexual intercourse
)
sexual jealousy.
See
jealousy
sexual neutrality,
143–44
sexual orientation,
132
sexual overperception bias,
172
sexual pleasure
after hysterectomy,
34–35
communication about,
43–44
G-spot stimulation and,
35
orgasm and (
see
orgasm
)
penetration and,
34
touch and,
29–31
Sexual Pleasure in Marriage
,
138–39
sexual reputation,
85–87
sexual revictimization,
223–24
sexual selflessness,
49
sexual submission,
207–10
sexuality
body image and,
193–95
cultural expectations about,
45–46
evolution-based hypotheses on,
171–73
religion and,
73–75
self-esteem and,
191–92
sexy-son hypothesis,
25
Shakespeare, William
Othello
,
103
She Came in Through the Bathroom Window
,
92
Shiva,
50
shopping,
84
shoulder-to-hip ratio,
11–12
Simpson, Jessica,
89
Singapore,
176
Siriono,
187–88
Siskind, Janet,
170
Skene’s gland,
36
skin,
29
slavery, sexual,
175–76
smell, sense of,
5–8
Smith, Will,
69
Smuts, Barbara,
232
social esteem,
197–200
social reputation,
xvi–xvii
Somalia,
176
spectatoring,
241
Spitzer, Eliot,
177
spontaneous orgasms,
42
spouse abuse,
114
Sprecher, Susan,
58
status orgasmus,
39
Stewart, Jon,
22
Stewart, Rod,
148
stress
depression and,
249–50