Abstract
The current research explored continuous behavioral processes by recording participants’ hand movements toward a response option using Mousetracker software. Across three studies, we tested the idea that sexual interest-related decisions can be indexed using automatic movements. Using a UK sample of self-identified same- and opposite-gender attracted men (N = 43), Study 1 showed that the process of approaching the response button was faster, more direct, and less curved when participants responded from their own (vs. a non-preferred) perspective. Study 2 supported these findings using a German sample of self-identified same- and opposite-gender attracted men (N = 66). Using a teleiophilic sample of 100 self-identified opposite-gender attracted men (n = 51) and women (n = 49), Study 3 examined age-specific sexual interests (i.e., responding to stimuli from a pedophilic and a teleiophilic perspective). As expected, in the teleiophilic block, participants’ responses were faster, more direct, and less curved than in the pedophilic block. Collectively, the results suggest that mousetracking shows promise as a measure of sexual interest (across the dimension of both gender and age), providing grounds for future research.
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Elizabeth Deehan and Nikki Beard for their help in collecting data for Study 1 and Lena Allendorf for her help in collecting data for Study 2.
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Bartels, R.M., Lister, V.P.M., Imhoff, R. et al. Tracking Mouse Trajectories Related to Decisions About Sexual Interest. Arch Sex Behav 48, 1387–1401 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-019-1436-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-019-1436-3