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Sexual arousal is the process and state of an animal being ready for sexual intercourse.
Human sexual arousal
Unlike most other animals, human beings of both sexes are potentially capable of
sexual arousal throughout the year, and there is therefore no human mating
season. Things that precipitate human sexual arousal are commonly known as turn-ons.
Causes of human sexual arousal
Signs of possible human sexual arousal
Human sexual response cycle
During the 1950s and 1960s, William H. Masters and Virginia E. Johnson conducted many important
studies within the field of human sexuality. In 1966, the two released a book, Human Sexual Response, detailing four stages of physiological changes in
humans during sexual stimulation. These phases, in order of their occurrence, are excitement, plateau, orgasmic, and
resolution.
See human sexual response
cycle.
Homophobia and sexual arousal
Psychoanalytic theory has long held that homophobia is the result of repressed homosexual desires. A study showed that more homophobic heterosexual men (80%) showed signs of arousal from
being shown images of homosexual sex than non-homophobic heterosexual men (34%). See 'Is Homophobia
Associated With Homosexual Arousal?' .
The two groups were, however, aroused to the same degree by heterosexual imagery and lesbian imagery. The authors noted as a
competing explanation that anxiety also produces arousal and might be responsible for the difference, so further research should
test the two competing explanations.
Sexual arousal in other animals
It is not completely understood how other animals relate sexually, but current research studies suggest that animals, like
humans, enjoy sexual relations. This is especially noted in dogs, dolphins, and bonobos.
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