Nature Neuroscience
7, 325 - 326 (2004)
doi:10.1038/nn0404-325
Imaging gender differences in sexual arousalTurhan Canli1
& John D E Gabrieli21
Turhan Canli is at the Department of Psychology, SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794-2500, USA. turhan.canli@sunysb.edu
2
John D.E. Gabrieli is at the Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Jordan Hall, Stanford, California 94305, USA. gabrieli@psych.stanford.edu
Men tend to be more interested than women in visual sexually arousing stimuli. Now we learn that when they view identical stimuli, even when women report greater arousal, the amydala and hypothalamus are much more strongly activated in men.
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