Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

New Sexuality Study Claims That Nobody Is 100% 'Straight'—& the 'Proof' Is in Our Eyes

New Sexuality Study Claims That Nobody Is 100% 'Straight'—& the 'Proof' Is in Our Eyes
mark peterson/Getty Images

The idea that sexuality is a spectrum rather than the variation between two extremes (completely homosexual or heterosexual) isn't a new one. In fact, tools like the Kinsey scale and the human sexuality spectrum, which claim that most people fall somewhere in between 100% gay or straight, have both been widely discussed and, to differing degrees, accepted by the LGBTQ community for years, even if they hadn't been demonstrated with cold hard data... until now.

Researchers at Cornell University recently published a study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology which claims there's no such thing as a "straight" man or woman.


The team used some interesting methods to gather their data.

Many psychological tests which deal with sexual arousal rely on self-reporting, which can be somewhat unreliable if the test subject has any biases which might skew his or her answers. So, for this study, the researchers decided to measure sexual arousal based on "physical responses" like pupil dilation (human's pupils dilate when they're turned on).

From there, it was a simple matter of showing the test subjects various selections of pornography and taking a close look at their pupil's responses!

Ritch C. Savin-Williams, Director of Developmental Psychology at Cornell University and author of the study, further explained the process to 'Broadly:'

It's basically a study that assesses sexual orientation by looking at the eyes and whether they dilate or not. You can't control your eye dilation. Essentially, that's what the whole project attempts to get at, another way of assessing sexuality without relying on self report. Another way of course is genital arousal, but that gets a little invasive.

The team's results were unexpected!

Women's eyes would dilate when viewing images of a man and woman having sex, or just two women having sex. This was slightly different for lesbians who, like (purportedly heterosexual) men, responded to both sexes, but showed a more prominent preference for women.

Savin-William's also described straight male's responses:

We show straight men a picture of a woman masturbating and they respond just like a straight guy, but then you also show them a guy masturbating and their eyes dilate a little bit. So we're actually able to show physiologically that all guys are not either gay, straight, or bi.

Even among LGBTQ individuals, however, the study has its detractors. Some are skeptical of how effective measuring pupil dilation can be for detecting real sexual attraction.

Though human sexuality is far from completely understood, Savin-Williams is certain a more flexible, spectrum-based understanding of who we're attracted to will make the world a better place:

If you look at women, the self esteem of lesbian women tends to be higher than that of straight women. Maybe they feel like they have more freedom [to be who they really are]. Granted, society may not always like it, but it is your own authentic self.

H/T - The Independent, Broadly

More from News/lgbtq

Woman with her arms crossed
Photo by ᕈ O W L Y on Unsplash

People Explain Which 'Small' Social Rules They Refuse To Ever Follow

Home, work, the library, other people's homes, the grocery store; no matter where we go, there are rules and expectations.

Perhaps most of these are reasonable enough to assume everyone will follow along and do them to make the setting comfortable for everyone.

Keep Reading Show less
Kat Dennings attends iHeartRadio Jingle Ball 2025 presented by Capital One.
Jesse Grant/Getty Images for iHeartRadio

MCU Fans Concerned After Kat Dennings Reveals That Marvel Has 'Scanned' Her Likeness

When you hear that you’re getting a “body scan,” you probably assume it’s tied to a medical procedure—not that your entire physical likeness is being quietly archived for potential future use in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

But that’s allegedly what happened to MCU star Kat Dennings, who casually dropped the revelation while addressing her status in Avengers: Doomsday.

Keep Reading Show less
SZA; Cher
Leon Bennett/The Recording Academy/Getty Images; Johnny Nunez/The Recording Academy/Getty Images

SZA Defends Cher After Her Awkward 'Luther Vandross' Mix-Up During The Grammys

From Chappell Roan's daring red carpet look, to Sabrina Carpenter getting teary-eyed at missing out on six Grammys, to memorable stage performances, the 2026 Grammys left us with a lot to talk about!

But one of the funniest moments had to be Cher's presentation of the Record of the Year.

Keep Reading Show less
Nancy Mace
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Nancy Mace Dragged After Damning Profile Reveals The Lengths She Went To Be 'Hottest Woman In Congress'

South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace is getting dragged after a damning New York Magazine profile revealed she forced staffers to create burner Reddit accounts to boost her standing in a "hottest women in Congress" forum.

According to sources, Mace was so "obsessed" with monitoring her online reputation that she "instructed" one staffer to “go on Reddit forums about the ‘hottest women in Congress’ to boost her standing in the rankings and comment where needed.”

Keep Reading Show less
Chappell Roan attends the 68th GRAMMY Awards in sheer and revealing gown.
Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Getty Images

Chappell Roan's NSFW Dress On The Grammys Red Carpet Has Fans Doing A Double-Take

Awards season is the time to dabble in the most daring of looks—something Chappell Roan and her team took very seriously.

At this weekend’s 68th Grammy Awards ceremony, Roan earned nominations for Record of the Year and Best Pop Solo Performance for "The Subway," her hit single released in late July. One of her fellow nominees in both categories was Sabrina Carpenter, who lost the Best New Artist race to Roan in 2025.

Keep Reading Show less