| Cat Vincent ( @ 2008-05-15 23:35:00 |
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| Current mood: | doubtful |
| Current music: | Drone Zone: Atmospheric ambient space music. Serve Best Chilled. Safe with most medications. [SomaFM] |
| Entry tags: | science, sex |
Sexy science - but not sexy enough?
Scientific American has just run a piece on the biology of orgasm - which is cool.
However...
On page 3 of this piece, the following study is quoted:
' To find out whether orgasm looks similar in the female brain, Holstege’s team asked the male partners of 12 women to stimulate their partner’s clitoris—the site whose excitation most easily leads to orgasm—until she climaxed, again inside a PET scanner. Not surprisingly, the team reported in 2006, clitoral stimulation by itself led to activation in areas of the brain involved in receiving and perceiving sensory signals from that part of the body and in describing a body sensation—for instance, labeling it “sexual.”
But when a woman reached orgasm, something unexpected happened: much of her brain went silent. Some of the most muted neurons sat in the left lateral orbitofrontal cortex, which may govern self-control over basic desires such as sex. Decreased activity there, the researchers suggest, might correspond to a release of tension and inhibition. The scientists also saw a dip in excitation in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, which has an apparent role in moral reasoning and social judgment—a change that may be tied to a suspension of judgment and reflection.
Brain activity fell in the amygdala, too, suggesting a depression of vigilance similar to that seen in men, who generally showed far less deactivation in their brain during orgasm than their female counterparts did. “Fear and anxiety need to be avoided at all costs if a woman wishes to have an orgasm; we knew that, but now we can see it happening in the depths of the brain,” Holstege says. He went so far as to declare at the 2005 meeting of the European Society for Human Reproduction and Development: “At the moment of orgasm, women do not have any emotional feelings.” '
(Emphasis mine.)
I have to say my admittedly anecdotal experience contradicts both these points. Drastically.
Again I am reminded of my wish to see a study of sexual expression run with medical fetishists - so that the whole getting-off-inside-a-MRI-machine part enhances rather than taints the study.
But then again, try finding someone who fits the bill who doesn't have piercings!