Implicit Measures in Clinical Sex Research: A Critical Evaluation

Hinzmann J, Borg C, de Jong PJ (2020)


Publication Type: Journal article, Review article

Publication year: 2020

Journal

DOI: 10.1016/j.sxmr.2020.06.005

Abstract

Introduction: Current information-processing models of sexual arousal imply that both controlled and automatic affective-motivational processes are critically involved in sexual responding and suggest that dysfunctional automatic processes may be involved in the development and persistence of sexual dysfunctions. Because (dysfunctional) automatic processes and responses cannot be adequately captured by common self-report measures, implicit performance-based measures have been developed to index these processes. Objectives: This review provides an overview of studies that used implicit tasks in clinical sexual research, and critically evaluates the contribution and promise of these measures to improve our understanding of the mechanisms involved in sexual dysfunctions. Methods: 6 electronic main databases (AMED, MEDLINE, PsycArticles, Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection, PsycINFO, and SocINDEX) were searched for studies involving implicit measurement techniques to measure automatic processes in clinical sex research. Results: A series of studies examined if lowered (or heightened) attention for sex stimuli may be involved in low sexual arousal, low desire, and genital pain. Preliminary evidence showed that lowered attention is involved in low sexual arousal. The pattern with regard to desire and genital pain was mixed which may be due to heterogeneity in assessment instruments. A limited number of studies examined automatic memory associations with sexual cues. Preliminary evidence showed negative (sex-threat/sex-disgust) associations in women with genito-pelvic pain or penetration disorder, less positive associations in women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder, and sex-positive and sex-failure associations in men with sexual distress. Thus far, no studies have examined lowered (or heightened) automatic sexual approach tendencies related to sexual dysfunctions. Conclusion: Implicit measures showed some promise as tools to index automatic sex-relevant cognitive mechanisms in sexual dysfunctions. Yet, more systematic research and the development of psychometrically sound measures are critical for a more comprehensive evaluation of the relevance of implicit measures in clinical sex research and their usefulness as indices of individual differences in clinical practice. Hinzmann J, Borg C, de Jong PJ. Implicit Measures in Clinical Sex Research: A Critical Evaluation. Sex Med Rev 2020;XX:XXX–XXX.

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APA:

Hinzmann, J., Borg, C., & de Jong, P.J. (2020). Implicit Measures in Clinical Sex Research: A Critical Evaluation. Sexual Medicine Reviews. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sxmr.2020.06.005

MLA:

Hinzmann, Jessica, Charmaine Borg, and Peter J. de Jong. "Implicit Measures in Clinical Sex Research: A Critical Evaluation." Sexual Medicine Reviews (2020).

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