This article by Kayt Sukel was posted at
Big Think a couple of weeks ago. Sukel looks at some research on the differences in male vs. female sexual response and orgasm. Men are often accused of not understanding the differences in the ways women respond sexually from how men respond, so this article offers a little step in rectifying that (overgeneralized, in my opinion) complaint.
As I travel around and talk about the neuroscience of orgasm,
there is one question I am consistently asked--usually by a particularly
curious and outgoing person of the male persuasion:
"Is my orgasm the same as my female partner's orgasm?"
There are questions about whether neuroscience can provide some
answers to a few basic questions. Can only women have multiple
orgasms? (Or, do women really have multiple orgasms at all?) Is what a
man feels when he is reaching climax qualitatively (or quantitatively)
the same as what a woman experiences? How are we the same? How are we
different? Do those differences, if they exist, perhaps enhance (or
detract) from sexual pleasure?
These are fascinating questions. But let's stick with the basic one:
is an orgasm the same whether it is experienced by a man or a woman?
Looking at anecdotal evidence, there is a pervasive notion that the
male and the female orgasm are different entities altogether. It's
understandable, I suppose. They can seem very, very different--from
arousal to aftermath. But, as it so happens, older research looking at
the brain at orgasm suggested that the male and female orgasms were more
alike than different.
Janniko Georgiadis and colleagues at the University of Groningen in
the Netherlands compared cerebral blood flow in both men and women both
during genital stimulation and at the point of orgasm using positron
emission tomography (PET). They found significant differences in
activation patterns during arousal but not orgasm itself. And they
concluded that those differences were likely due to differences in our
anatomical equipment--which, when you think about it, makes a lot of
sense. What works on arousing a penis may not be quite as magical when
applied to a clitoris. (Though, different strokes for different
folks...)
Of course, PET does not have the resolution or speed of a
neuroimaging technique like functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI). Could it be the lack of differences between the
sexes--differences which seem to many of us to be both obvious and
innate--might be detected if we had better tools to examine the
question?
It's entirely possible. And very recently, Nan Wise and Barry
Komisaruk, researchers at Rutgers University, decided to take a look.
As part of their series of studies on the time course of orgasm--that
is, the chain of activation of brain components leading up to, during,
and after orgasm--they compared men and women participants
self-stimulating to orgasm. Using fMRI and then a graphical causal
modeling analysis technique, they compared effective connectivity, or
how blood flow traveled between key areas of the brain like the
cerebellum, the paracentral lobule, the nucleus accumbens and the
frontal pole (areas that had been identified as important to orgasm in
previous studies), as individuals self-stimulated to orgasm.
Wise and Komisaruk presented this work at Neuroscience 2012,
the largest neuroscience conference in the world. The preliminary
results suggest that both men and women (whether women were
self-stimulating manually or just "thinking off") showed significant
activation of the frontal pole feeding back to the paracentral lobule,
an area that processes sensorimotor signals from the lower extremities,
at the point of orgasm. Think about that--the frontal cortex, an area
involved in both planning and inhibition, is projecting back to an area
involved with processing sensation. Does that demonstrate fantasy?
Release? Control? Wise and Komisaruk aren't sure.
Yet, all groups showed this same effect. So perhaps Georgiadis'
study wasn't so far off the mark and things aren't as different on the
orgasm front as they seem (though, in terms of full disclosure, Georgiadis never did find frontal cortex activation in any of his orgasm studies).
Or are they? When the group looked closer at effective connectivity,
they did see slightly different activation patterns, both between the
sexes and between individuals. It's hard to know what to make of that.
Wise and Komisaruk are quick to point out that they need more
participants to make any hard and fast conclusions about sex
differences.
So next time I'm asked about the nature of the male vs. female
orgasm, I'll have a little more to add to my explanation. But my answer
will have to be that the scientific jury, at least, is still out. For
now.
What do you think? Is the male orgasm qualitatively and neurobiologically distinct from the female orgasm?
Photo credit: Vasilchenko Nikita/Shutterstock.com
No comments:
Post a Comment