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Biology of Sexuality Inborn Determinants of Human Sexual Response

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Raymond E. Goodman*
Affiliation:
Community Health Service, Eccles Health Centre, Corporation Road, Eccles, Manchester, M30 0NJ

Summary

Opinions vary on the relative importance of biological and learning processes in the aetiology of sexual expression and deviance. The structure of personality, consistency of fantasy patterns, and the familial nature of homosexuality hint at a biological an/age. Research with the HY-antigen complex and X chromosome, and the elucidation of the interactions of intrauterine testosterone and its products with the foetal brain and neurotransmitters, have given us new models to understand the programming of sexuality. However, gonadotrophin feedback is not relevant as an indicator of brain feminization in primates and man. Finally, the interaction of masculinization and defeminization provides us with a model for understanding homosexual behaviour.

Type
Symposium on Sexual Deviation
Copyright
Copyright © 1983 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

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