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1 sm [1, 2] and can change size and shape upon sexual arousal.
2 he first IN, thus indicating a high level of sexual arousal.
3 rginase plays a role in both male and female sexual arousal.
4 tructures whose activation is time-locked to sexual arousal.
5 ch as regulating K+ channels and stimulating sexual arousal.
6          10) effect on subjective ratings of sexual arousal.
7 tion was linearly dependent on self-reported sexual arousal.
8 y altered vaginal immune responses following sexual arousal.
9 such as maternal behavior, reproduction, and sexual arousal.
10 ors, such as sexual behaviors that depend on sexual arousal?
11 tter volume of brain regions associated with sexual arousal (3,723 adults) did not show any causal re
12 d responses in brain regions associated with sexual arousal (amygdala, hypothalamus, and ventral stri
13  physical injury and are not associated with sexual arousal and without suicidal intent.
14  increases in "activation" symptoms (energy, sexual arousal, and diminished sleep) (r = 0.55; P =.02)
15 t the brain, including areas associated with sexual arousal, and in diverse non-neural and reproducti
16 ause developed decreased libido, rapidity of sexual arousal, and intensity of orgasm.
17 edial temporal lobe is centrally involved in sexual arousal, and this circuit may be implicated in or
18 e associations between alterations of female sexual arousal as well as vaginal lubrication and the si
19 nt results regarding the motor correlates of sexual arousal demonstrating an early freezing response
20 drome (PCOS) frequently experience decreased sexual arousal, desire, and sexual satisfaction.
21                                       Female sexual arousal disorder (FSAD) is a highly prevalent sex
22 at hypoactive sexual desire disorder, female sexual arousal disorder, female orgasmic disorder and fe
23 tribute to sexual dysfunction, in particular sexual arousal disorder.
24  target for the treatment of male and female sexual arousal disorders.
25              Internal motive states, such as sexual arousal, drive behaviour in response to social cu
26 mination holds promise for future studies of sexual arousal dysfunction in women.
27 To develop efficacious treatments for female sexual arousal dysfunction, researchers need to differen
28 e relevant to the diagnosis and treatment of sexual arousal dysfunction.
29 ivation can be counteracted by raising their sexual arousal, either by engaging the flies with prolon
30 esire (EST1 = .48 and EST2 = .72; P < .001), sexual arousal (EST2 = .50; P = .008), and vaginal lubri
31 ted.Genes and circuits involved in sleep and sexual arousal have been extensively studied in Drosophi
32 e relationships between brain activation and sexual arousal in a group of young, healthy, heterosexua
33                                              Sexual arousal in flies counteracts the effects of sleep
34                          The neural basis of sexual arousal in humans is associated with sexual orien
35            Studies of subjective and genital sexual arousal in monosexual (i.e. heterosexual and homo
36  impact of various neurological disorders on sexual arousal in women and to develop appropriate manag
37                                              Sexual arousal in women comprises two components: genita
38 cilitate the initial stages of physiological sexual arousal in women.
39 gic agonist, on subjective and physiological sexual arousal in women.
40 bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BST) in sexual arousal, inferred from noncontact erection (NCE)
41       Choosing a mate requires a way to turn sexual arousal into sexual action.
42                                              Sexual arousal is a dynamical, highly coordinated neurop
43       Our data indicate that impaired female sexual arousal is associated with MS lesions in the occi
44                                 The study of sexual arousal is at the interface of affective and soci
45 er sexual desire (MnD, -0.3; P < .01), lower sexual arousal (MnD, -0.3; P < .01), lower sexual satisf
46 des a persistent, escalating state of female sexual arousal or drive during mating.
47 pretation that sexual conditioning increases sexual arousal or receptivity in both sexes but the incr
48 imal's reward system was stimulated by food, sexual arousal, or addictive drugs.
49 a symptoms were largely associated with poor sexual arousal, orgasmic dysfunction, sexual distress, a
50  (P = .003) and orgasm (P = .006) in men and sexual arousal (P = .05) and sexual satisfaction (P = .0
51 ion compared with placebo, (2) physiological sexual arousal (penile tumescence), and (3) behavioral m
52                                              Sexual arousal possibly plays a role in modifying vagina
53 ies have shown that not all women who report sexual arousal problems have decreased genital arousal,
54                                          The sexual arousal response in healthy women can be monitore
55 muli revealed large networks correlated with sexual arousal, spanning multiple cortical and subcortic
56  sexual motivation and ratings of subjective sexual arousal to and enjoyment of an auditory stimulus.
57 ile viewing the films, participants' vaginal sexual arousal was recorded using vaginal photoplethysmo
58     Sexual sadists show increased peripheral sexual arousal when observing other individuals in pain.
59 ETH affects courtship behavior by increasing sexual arousal while decreasing successful sexual perfor
60 artners, and a subjectively altered state of sexual arousal while using pornography.
61 ignificant increase in vaginal IgA following sexual arousal, while women with CSA histories had a dec