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Carvalho. J., Nobre. P. (2011). Gender Differences in Sexual Desire: How Do Emotional and Relationship Factors Determine Sexual Desire According to Gender?. Sexologies, 20(4), 207-211.

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Article

Gender Differences: Association of Sex Drives and Marital Satisfaction

1M.Phil Psychology, National Institute of Psychology, Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad


American Journal of Applied Psychology. 2016, Vol. 4 No. 2, 31-38
DOI: 10.12691/ajap-4-2-2
Copyright © 2016 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Saira Javed, Tabish Gul, Umm-e-Siddiqa. Gender Differences: Association of Sex Drives and Marital Satisfaction. American Journal of Applied Psychology. 2016; 4(2):31-38. doi: 10.12691/ajap-4-2-2.

Correspondence to: Saira  Javed, M.Phil Psychology, National Institute of Psychology, Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad. Email: Saira.javedbhati@gmail.com

Abstract

Men and women are very different in nature and preferences of their sexual behavior. Sex drive refers to the strength of sexual impulse in one’s body and significantly impact marital satisfaction/relationship. The main purpose of conducting present study was to identify differences in strength of sexual desire between men and women and what impacts it has on marital satisfaction in Pakistani context. This study took place in the twin cities of Pakistan (Rawalpindi & Islamabad). Data was collected from married individuals using convenient sampling technique. The participants reported on demographic sheet, Sexual Desire Inventory- 2 (Spector, Carey & Steinberg, 1996) for assessing sexual desires and ENRICH Marital Satisfaction Scale (Flowers & Olsen, 1993) for evaluating marital satisfaction among married couples after signing formal consent from each participant. Present study is cross-sectional, descriptive and quantitative in nature, was administered on a sample of 200 married individuals ranging between 22 to 46 years age. To test the hypotheses, independent samples t-test, ANOVA and Pearson’s bivariate correlation coefficient was used from SPSS version 21. It was assumed that males will score higher on sexual desire than females. The results show no significant difference between the level of sexual desire between male and females. The second hypothesis assumed that sexual desire and marital satisfaction are positively correlated. The results confirmed this assumption as there was a small positive correlation between sexual desire and marital satisfaction. Current research also tested whether level of education is associated with sexual desire. However, results indicate that education level does not predict sexual desire.

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