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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Alcohol alters men's perceptual and decisional processing of women's sexual interest.



The current investigation examines the etiology of men's errors in sexual perception after moderate alcohol use.

Sensitivity and bias estimates, derived from multidimensional signal detection analysis, revealed that men's alcohol-influenced performance was associated with declining sensitivity to the distinction between women's friendliness and sexual interest.

However, sensitivity to the distinction between conservative and provocative clothing was unaffected.

Similarly, an alcohol dose led to an increased bias to respond that women's ambiguous cues were sexual interest (rather than friendliness) but did not influence response thresholds for clothing style.

Thus, there was specificity to the perceptual and decisional changes associated with alcohol use rather than a simple degradation of men's capacity to process all dating-relevant cues in the environment.

Given the link between alcohol use, sexual misperception, and acquaintance-initiated sexual coercion, understanding the etiology of sexual misperception in the context of alcohol use may inform sexual coercion prevention efforts.



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