Human Sexual Cycles are Driven by Culture and Match Collective Moods
Ian B. Wood, Pedro Leal Varela, Johan Bollen, Luis M. Rocha, and Joana, Gon\c{c}alves-S\'a

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that human sexual interest peaks during cultural and religious celebrations worldwide, and these peaks align with birth cycles and collective moods, indicating culture's dominant influence over biological factors.
Contribution
It provides evidence that cultural factors and collective emotions significantly influence human sexual cycles, challenging the traditional biological explanations.
Findings
Interest in sex peaks during major cultural celebrations worldwide.
Shifted online sex interest correlates with human birth cycles.
Collective moods associated with celebrations relate to sex search volume.
Abstract
It is a long-standing question whether human sexual and reproductive cycles are affected predominantly by biology or culture. The literature is mixed with respect to whether biological or cultural factors best explain the reproduction cycle phenomenon, with biological explanations dominating the argument. The biological hypothesis proposes that human reproductive cycles are an adaptation to the seasonal cycles caused by hemisphere positioning, while the cultural hypothesis proposes that conception dates vary mostly due to cultural factors, such as vacation schedule or religious holidays. However, for many countries, common records used to investigate these hypotheses are incomplete or unavailable, biasing existing analysis towards primarily Christian countries in the Northern Hemisphere. Here we show that interest in sex peaks sharply online during major cultural and religious…
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