A STUDY has found women enjoy looking at naked female bodies just as much as men’s.

Experts say ladies are more flexible and are innately more “fluid” in their sexuality.

2 Growing numbers of female celebrities are discussing their same-sex relationships, including Cara Delevingne and St Vincent Credit: Getty Images

The research – carried out by Cardiff University – involved 57 men and women who were showed a series of sexy images and asked how attractive they found the people in them.

The group looked at pairs of pictures – one male and one female – which were then replaced with a faint dot.

The more quickly the volunteer spotted the dot the more attention they were thought to have been paying to the picture, the Mail Online reports.

The male participants noticed the dots that followed pictures of female bodies most quickly.

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Women, on the other hand, were equally drawn to both male and female images.

One theory is that this is down to women being innately more ‘fluid’ than men when it comes to their sexuality

Another is that women have lower sex drives, meaning they are not as immediately excited by seeing a naked man.

Ladies may also look at the female bodies to compare them to their own.

In a second experiment a different group of women actually responded more quickly to female images than male ones.

The report coincides with a growing visibility of bisexual women in the media.

A number of female celebrities have discussed their same sex relationships, including supermodel Cara Delevingne and her former partner St Vincent.

Actress Amber Heard had a long-term relationship with a female photographer, Tasya van Ree, before her marriage to film star Johnny Depp.

2 Supermodel Cara Delevingne has spoken out about dating musician St. Vincent Credit: Splash News

The results of his study are in line with recent research from America which showed that women were more likely to describe themselves as bisexual than men.

Researcher Elizabeth McClintock, from the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, said that ‘male eroticisation’ of same-sex female relationships allows women to experiment – for instance by kissing other women at parties – without being stigmatised.

A separate study from the University of Essex last year went as far as suggesting women are never 100 per cent heterosexual.

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