Sexual arousal can cause ‘tunnel vision’, making it more difficult to recognize when someone is not that interested in you, a new US study has found. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
Previous research has shown that sexual arousal can cause people to overestimate their partner’s romantic interest in them, but these interactions included neutral or positive signals from potential partners. In this new study, potential partners provided mixed or ambiguous cues to more closely reflect the early encounters of their relationships in the real world.
Sexual arousal made participants significantly more likely to interpret ambiguous interactions optimistically. They were interested where there was only uncertainty. Part of the reason may be that the excitement increased the partner’s likeability, making people more inclined to see what they wanted to see. ”
Dr. Grit Birnbaum, first author, Professor of Psychology, Reichmann University
The researchers wanted to determine whether sexual priming influences risk control. One group of participants watched a sexual video before chatting online with someone who was asked to convey mixed signals across various interaction stages. Another group watched a non-sexual video and had similar conversations.
After the chat, participants rated their chat partner’s likeability and perceived interest. People who watched sexual videos before the conversation were more likely to find the person they were chatting with attractive and to perceive that person as having a romantic interest in them. The only exception to this effect appeared in the final study of the article when the chat partner showed clear and unmistakable signs of rejection. In this case, participants accurately recognized that the person they were chatting with did not have romantic feelings for them.
“Sexual arousal distorts perception only when there is room for hope in the situation,” Birnbaum says. “It helps you overcome fear of rejection by tilting your perception in a more hopeful direction.”
This perceptual tilt can serve a purpose early in courtship, when a degree of optimism is needed to take risks with a new partner, but Birnbaum points out that it can come at a cost.
“Desire can mask sensitivity to other people’s actual wishes,” Birnbaum explains. “In those moments, we may not be seeing the interaction as it really is. We’re seeing it as we expect it to be, but we’re missing the signs that the door isn’t actually open.”
The authors emphasize that future research should test these processes in more natural settings, such as online dating platforms, and across different stages of relationship development. More broadly, this discovery deepens our understanding of how our circumstances, as well as our internal states, shape how we perceive those around us. It turns out that desire doesn’t just motivate us to pursue connection. And silently adjusting the lenses that read the signals it receives along the way might help it achieve that goal.
sauce:
Society of Personality and Social Psychology
Reference magazines:
Birnbaum, G. E., and Zoltak, K. (2026). They’re just not that interested in you: Does sexual arousal interfere with the perception of rejection signals? Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. DOI: 10.1177/01461672261439417. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/01461672261439417

