The sexual incentive motivation model suggests that attractive stimuli activate the sexual response system. Attraction toward one's partner has been linked to greater sexual satisfaction, but no quantitative studies have examined its links to sexual desire or distress among those with sexual dysfunction. We examined associations between daily attraction toward one's partner and sexual satisfaction, desire, and distress for individuals with Sexual Interest/Arousal Disorder (SIAD) and their partners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour distinct partner responses to sexual rejection - sexual advances that are declined by a partner - have been identified. This study assessed the frequency of these responses between and within North American couples coping with Sexual Interest/Arousal Disorder (SIAD) and community couples and - in line with the - compared the associations between responses to sexual rejection and sexual and relationship well-being across the two samples. Individuals with SIAD and their partners ( = 241) and community couples ( = 105) completed online measures of sexual rejection responses, sexual satisfaction, sexual desire, sexual distress, sexual frequency, and relationship satisfaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is unclear whether sexual well-being, which is an important part of individual and relational health, may be at risk for declines after a pregnancy loss given the limits of prior work. Accordingly, in a cross-sectional study, we used structural equation modeling to (1) compare sexual well-being levels-satisfaction, desire, function, distress, and frequency-of both partners in couples who had experienced a pregnancy loss in the past four months (N = 103 couples) to their counterparts in a control sample of couples with no history of pregnancy loss (N = 120 couples), and (2) compare sexual well-being levels of each member of a couple to one another. We found that gestational individuals and their partners in the pregnancy loss sample were less sexually satisfied than their control counterparts but did not differ in sexual desire, problems with sexual function, nor sexual frequency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Couples in long-term relationships often face sexual challenges (eg, sexual response difficulties) that may disrupt their typical sexual routine or sexual script. Individuals with more rigid sexual scripts (eg, sex must include penile-vaginal intercourse) may struggle to navigate their sexual difficulties, potentially resulting in lower sexual well-being for themselves and their partners.
Aim: In a dyadic longitudinal study, we examined whether individuals' greater sexual script flexibility when coping with recent sexual challenges was associated with their own and their partner's greater sexual well-being (ie, dyadic sexual desire, sexual satisfaction, low sexual distress).