AROUSAL
When we are attracted to or aroused by someone sexually, all our senses, but particularly sight, touch and hearing, come into play. Our sense of smell, while important, plays a much smaller part than it does in other species. Traditionally, it has been the woman who attracts with visual displays of gestures and apparel, and the man who responds with sexual arousal, but changing patterns of sexual behaviour has led to a somewhat greater equality of roles. For example, today both sexes wear clothes explicitly to attract the opposite sex – men wear tight trousers and
formfitting tops, and women wear low-cut necklines and slim, short skirts.
In terms of the stimuli that excite them, men and women differ markedly. Men, generally, are stimulated by what they see. Women, on the other hand, are very different; as a general rule, they respond very little and very slowly to visual stimuli. Women are more interested in men in the context of their personalities.
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