![]() ![]() Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 50, 44–60.īrewer, G., & Hendrie, C. Religious fundamentalism and limited prosociality as a function of the target. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 40, 619–630.īlogowska, J., & Saroglou, V. The relationship among sexual attitudes, sexual fantasy, and religiosity. ![]() ![]() These effects were small to moderate and emerged after controlling for demographics, sexual history, ease of orgasm, and previously established psychological correlates of faking orgasm, including suspected partner infidelity and intrasexual competition.Īhrold, T. Furthermore, the more that women believed female orgasm was necessary for men’s sexual gratification, the more likely they were to have faked an orgasm at least once in their lives compared to women who had never faked an orgasm. In contrast, those who espoused ostensibly positive but restrictive ideas of gender relations-that is, those high in benevolent sexism-had faked significantly fewer orgasms over their lifetime. A survey of 462 heterosexual women from the UK ( M age=38.38 years) found that those who espoused anti-feminist values-that is, those high in hostile sexism-had faked significantly more orgasms over their lifetime. In the current study, we assessed how women’s worldviews about gender relate to their faking orgasm behavior. The majority of women have faked an orgasm at least once in their lives. ![]()
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