_The Christian Post_ (http://www.christianpost.com/)  > _U.S._ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/us/) |Tue, Nov. 29 2011 12:23  PM EDT
Study: Men Think About Sex Far Less Than Every 7 Seconds
By _Jeff Schapiro_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/jeff-schapiro/)  | 
Christian Post  Reporter

 
A new study out of _Ohio_ (http://www.christianpost.com/region/ohio/)  
State University has found that men think about  sex more frequently than women 
do, but not nearly as much as popular cultural  myths would indicate.
 
Some say that men think about sex every seven seconds, but a new study 
titled  “Sex on the Brain?” has found that young men think about sex, on 
average, only  about 19 times per day. In comparison, young women reported 
thinking about sex  an average of only 10 times per day. The study is to appear 
in 
the January 2012  issue of the Journal of Sex Research. 
In addition to sex, researchers found that men also think about food and  
sleep more frequently than women do. On average, the male participants in the 
 study thought of food about 18 times daily and sleep 11 times, while women 
 thought of food only 15 times per day and nine times for sleep. 
Terri Fisher, lead author in the study and psychology professor at Ohio 
State  University's Mansfield campus, told The Christian Post via email on 
Tuesday the  study began with a discussion in her Human Sexuality class. 
“All of the previous studies [about sexual thoughts] but one had relied on  
retrospective self-reports or estimates,” she said. She indicated to her 
class  she would be interested in studying the issue further, and students 
Zachary T.  Moore and Mary-Jo Pittenger volunteered their assistance. 
The research was conducted with the participation of 163 female and 120 
male  college students, all between the ages of 18 and 25. At the beginning of 
the  study, each participant was asked to fill out a questionnaire which 
addressed a  number of factors – feelings about sex, sexual behavioral 
tendencies, level of  sexual desire and more – in order to gauge their thoughts 
about sexuality and a  number of other factors.  
Each student was then given a “golf tally counter” device, and was 
assigned  one topic to keep track of – either sex, food or sleep. Each time one 
of 
the 163  students who had been assigned to the sex category had any sort of 
sexual  thoughts, for example, they were to add another tally to the device. 
The food and sleep questions were designed to disguise the true focus of 
the  study – sexual thoughts – but ultimately helped reveal that men think 
about  biological needs other than sex more frequently than women do as well. 
“The participants in the study are at the age at which _gender_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/gender/)  differences in sexuality are 
likely to 
be  greater than at any other age,” said Fisher. “The importance of this 
study is  that it indicates that the sex differences are smaller than the 
general public  has believed, and that men seem to give equal attention to 
various need-related  thoughts, not just sex.” 
The study also found that each man and woman can vary greatly in the number 
 of times they think about sex in a day when compared to others of the same 
sex.  The men in the study thought about sex anywhere from one time to 388 
times per  day, while women varied from one to 140 times. 
“That certainly implies that men are not all alike when it comes to sex, 
and  neither are women,” Fisher said. “When young men are exposed to the 
stereotype  that all men think about is sex, they might feel less than normal 
if 
that is not  true of them. The results of our study indicate that this is 
not really true of  anyone! Even those who had the most frequent thoughts 
were not close to  approaching every seven seconds.” 
In the conclusion of the report, Fisher suggests that our _culture_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/culture/) 's portrayal of men as almost 
always 
thinking  about sex would be more accurate to also include thoughts of 
food, sleep and a  number of other topics.

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