Headlines
Man Robs Bank Armed with McDonald's Apple Pies
Police Arrest Naked Man Found Covered in Peanut Butter & Chocolate
Man Dies After Swallowing Dentures During Sex
'Soul Train' creator Don Cornelius dead
James Farentino dies at 73
White Castle Considers Offering Beer and Wine(I thought is where people went when already drunk)
America is Drunk(someone needs to slap Dr. Keith Ablow or buy him a drink or two)
Occupiers Pissing on Churches Housing Them (Literally)
Scientists research the female orgasm: Real or Myth ?
Seriously, scientists are looking into exactly what happens in a woman’s brain when they have an orgasm. My comments are added in bold type.
The first scan revealing exactly what happens inside a woman’s brain when she has an orgasm has been developed by scientists.
They have discovered that sexual arousal numbs the female nervous system to such an extent that she doesn’t feel as much pain – only pleasure. [I've known a lot of women who desire much rougher treatment at or near an orgasm.]
American researchers found that the orgasm affects up to 30 different parts of the brain including those responsible for emotion, touch, joy, satisfaction and memory. [Joy, satisfaction, touch seem pretty obvious. Emotion, I suppose sheds light on why women want to cuddle. Memory here is the interesting one for me.]
The team from Rutgers University, New Jersey, now hope to be able to map what typically happens inside a woman’s brain when she has an orgasm.
This could enable them to pinpoint what is going wrong among those with problems of sexual dysfunction or low libido.
They also want to build up a similar picture for men so they can compare how the sensation affects the male and female brains.
Evidence suggests women experience longer orgasms than men, and can have several in quick succession. [Yeah, those of us that have actually been with women already knew this. Thanks, science.]
The researchers asked eight women to stimulate themselves while lying under a blanket inside an Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scanner, a tunnel-like machine often used to detect brain tumours. [How do people find these jobs?]
Most women took less than five minutes to reach an orgasm although some took as long as 20.
During that time, the MRI scanner took images of their brain every two seconds to show which parts became active during the orgasm.
The scientists found that two minutes before the orgasm, the brain’s reward centres become active, the areas usually activated when eating food and drink. [I wonder if this gives substance to the "chocolate thing".]
Immediately before they reached the peak, other areas of the brain became affected such as the sensory cortex, which receives ‘touch’ messages from parts of the body and the thalamus, which relays signals to other parts of the body.
Once the orgasm has started other parts of the brain are activated such as those responsible for emotion -- the cingulate cortex and the insula.
The final part of the brain to be activated is the hypothalamus, the ‘control’ part of the brain which regulates temperature, hunger, thirst and tiredness.
At the same time another area responsible for pleasure is activated -- the nucleus accumbens -- as well as the caudate nucleus, which is responsible for memory.
Via JammieWearingFool.
I guess most of this is just scientists telling us what we already knew. However, I think more research is called for and I’m currently taking applications for test subjects.
Study: Heavy drinkers outlive non-drinkers
One of the most contentious issues in the vast literature about alcohol consumption has been the consistent finding that those who don’t drink actually tend to die sooner than those who do. The standard Alcoholics Anonymous explanation for this finding is that many of those who show up as abstainers in such research are actually former hard-core drunks who had already incurred health problems associated with drinking.
But a new paper in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research suggests that -- for reasons that aren’t entirely clear -- abstaining from alcohol does actually tend to increase one’s risk of dying even when you exclude former drinkers
I’ve often wondered myself if these studies were skewed by “recovering alcoholics”.
Moderate drinking, which is defined as one to three drinks per day, is associated with the lowest mortality rates in alcohol studies.
There’s lots and lots of good stuff over there so go read it.
Via: Drudge








