Sorta. Unfortunately they are all in books that I have read and I cannot find them for free online. The most telling study is from a book called Why Gender Matters by renowned psychologist Leonard Sax. The study is in Chapter 10 I believe, but chapters 6, 9, and 10 all have extremely valuable information regarding gay, lesbianism, and bisexuality. I believe Chapter 11 gets into transgenderism.
You should definitely check out that book as it is pretty groundbreaking stuff that progressives have tried to deviate away from. It is also crucial for any parent or teacher to understand. Since I cannot provide a link, I will give a summary of the study that I am referring to:
The study looked at the physiological reactions that heterosexual and homosexual men and women have when watching videos of three different types of sex: 1) man on woman [straight], 2) woman on woman [lesbian], 3) man on man [gay]. The way that they measured this was by using an instrument to detect any increases in blood flow to the genitals for each of the four groups of subjects: a) gay men, b) straight men, c) lesbian women, d) straight women.
The study was the first to use this quantitative measurement of increased blood flow to the genitals, rather than relying on simply asking the test subjects what they felt turned them on the most. To get a comparison to past studies, the subjects were still asked what turned them on the most, and that was compared to what their increase in blood flow was. The results were not what anyone expected, but they were very clear cut among the four groups.
a) Gay men
All of the gay men said that they felt the most turned on while watching gay sex. They felt somewhat turned on while watching straight sex. And they didn't feel turned on at all when watching lesbian sex. The blood flow results matched what they said. This was the only group where what they said was an exact correlation with the blood flow results.
b) Straight men
Most of the straight men said that the straight sex turned them on the most, however some said that the lesbian sex did. They all said that the gay sex did not turn them on. The blood flow results showed that there was the most blood flow when watching lesbian sex, the second most when watching straight sex, and zero increase in blood flow when watching gay sex.
Here is where it gets interesting...
c) Lesbian women
Lesbians all claimed that the lesbian sex turned them on the most, straight sex the second most, and almost all of them said that gay sex did not turn them on at all. The blood flow results showed that each individual subject had an almost equal increase in blood flow to the genitals for gay, straight and lesbian sex. So all three types of sex turned them on equally. It didn't matter what they were viewing. Aka: Their mind was telling them no, but their body was telling them yeeeeeessssss.
d) Straight women
The results for straight women shocked the researchers the most. All straight women said that they were most turned on by the straight sex, not turned on at all by the lesbian sex, and only a few said they felt slightly turned on by the gay sex. The blood flow results were the exact same as the lesbians. They were equally turned on by straight, gay, AND lesbian sex.
Bonus) Bisexual men and women
The study also looked at bisexual men and women. The bi women were the same as the other two groups of women. They said that they liked all three types the same. The bi men said they liked all three types the same. While it was true that there was increased blood flow when watching all three types of sex, there was always a bias towards either lesbian or gay sex.
So, based on this test we can conclude that women are physiologically different when it comes to men when regarding sexual attraction. Not only that, but it seems that under certain social circumstances, a woman can be either straight, lesbian, or bi, but that is not the case with men. Gay men do not get sexually stimulated by lesbian women. They are only stimulated when they watch sex that involves at least one man. Further, straight men do not become sexually stimulated by gay sex. They are only turned on when watching sex that involves at least one woman.
The other chapters in the book go into great detail as to why we see these distinct differences in sexual stimulation among men and women, but I won't spoil it for you.
Sorta. Unfortunately they are all in books that I have read and I cannot find them for free online. The most telling study is from a book called Why Gender Matters by renowned psychologist Leonard Sax. The study is in Chapter 10 I believe, but chapters 6, 9, and 10 all have extremely valuable information regarding gay, lesbianism, and bisexuality. I believe Chapter 11 gets into transgenderism.
You should definitely check out that book as it is pretty groundbreaking stuff that progressives have tried to deviate away from. It is also crucial for any parent or teacher to understand. Since I cannot provide a link, I will give a summary of the study that I am referring to:
The study looked at the physiological reactions that heterosexual and homosexual men and women have when watching videos of three different types of sex: 1) man on woman [straight], 2) woman on woman [lesbian], 3) man on man [gay]. The way that they measured this was by using an instrument to detect any increases in blood flow to the genitals for each of the four groups of subjects: a) gay men, b) straight men, c) lesbian women, d) straight women.
The study was the first to use this quantitative measurement of increased blood flow to the genitals, rather than relying on simply asking the test subjects what they felt turned them on the most. To get a comparison to past studies, the subjects were still asked what turned them on the most, and that was compared to what their increase in blood flow was. The results were not what anyone expected, but they were very clear cut among the four groups.
a) Gay men
All of the gay men said that they felt the most turned on while watching gay sex. They felt somewhat turned on while watching straight sex. And they didn't feel turned on at all when watching lesbian sex. The blood flow results matched what they said. This was the only group where what they said was an exact correlation with the blood flow results.
b) Straight men
Most of the straight men said that the straight sex turned them on the most, however some said that the lesbian sex did. They all said that the gay sex did not turn them on. The blood flow results showed that there was the most blood flow when watching lesbian sex, the second most when watching straight sex, and zero increase in blood flow when watching gay sex.
Here is where it gets interesting...
c) Lesbian women
Lesbians all claimed that the lesbian sex turned them on the most, straight sex the second most, and almost all of them said that gay sex did not turn them on at all. The blood flow results showed that each individual subject had an almost equal increase in blood flow to the genitals for gay, straight and lesbian sex. So all three types of sex turned them on equally. It didn't matter what they were viewing. Aka: Their mind was telling them no, but their body was telling them yeeeeeessssss.
d) Straight women
The results for straight women shocked the researchers the most. All straight women said that they were most turned on by the straight sex, not turned on at all by the lesbian sex, and only a few said they felt slightly turned on by the gay sex. The blood flow results were the exact same as the lesbians. They were equally turned on by straight, gay, AND lesbian sex.
Bonus) Bisexual men and women
The study also looked at bisexual men and women. The bi women were the same as the other two groups of women. They said that they liked all three types the same. The bi men said they liked all three types the same. While it was true that there was increased blood flow when watching all three types of sex, there was always a bias towards either lesbian or gay sex.
So, based on this test we can conclude that women are physiologically different when it comes to men when regarding sexual attraction. Not only that, but it seems that under certain social circumstances, a woman can be either straight, lesbian, or bi, but that is not the case with men. Gay men do not get sexually stimulated by lesbian women. They are only stimulated when they watch sex that involves at least one man. Further, straight men do not become sexually stimulated by gay sex. They are only turned on when watching sex that involves at least one woman.
The other chapters in the book go into great detail as to why we see these distinct differences in sexual stimulation among men and women, but I won't spoil it for you.