
@article{ref1,
title="Indirect effects of acute alcohol intoxication on sexual risk-taking: The roles of subjective and physiological sexual arousal",
journal="Archives of sexual behavior",
year="2009",
author="George, William H. and Davis, Kelly Cue and Norris, Jeanette and Heiman, Julia R. and Stoner, Susan A. and Schacht, Rebecca L. and Hendershot, Christian S. and Kajumulo, Kelly F.",
volume="38",
number="4",
pages="498-513",
abstract="Three experiments supported the idea that alcohol fosters sexual risk-taking in men and women, in part, through its effects on sexual arousal. In Experiment 1, increasing alcohol dosage (target blood alcohol levels of .00, .04, .08%) heightened men's and women's risk-taking intentions. Alcohol's effect was indirect via increased subjective sexual arousal; also, men exhibited greater risk-taking than women. In Experiment 2, an extended dosage range (target blood alcohol levels of .00, .06, .08, .10%) heightened men's risk-taking intentions. Alcohol's effect again was indirect via subjective arousal. Physiological sexual arousal, which was unaffected by alcohol, increased risk-taking via increased subjective arousal. In Experiment 3, alcohol increased women's risk-taking indirectly via subjective arousal, but alcohol-attenuated physiological arousal had no effect on risk-taking. Implications for alcohol myopia theory and prevention interventions are discussed.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0004-0002",
doi="10.1007/s10508-008-9346-9",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-008-9346-9"
}