Disorders such as anxiety, depression, or drug addiction may have their origin in the delicate bond between painful and positive experiences. Thus, the brain circuits that manage events on both sides can cancel each other out, with positive and negative experiences connected. Its imbalance is what would cause this type of disorder. It is one of the conclusions of the latest study carried out by a team of neuroscientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and collected by the journal Nature.
Is there really a vaginal orgasm? A group of scientists from the Department of Biology of the University of Florence (Italy) affirms that terms as widespread in society as "G spot" or vaginal or clitoral orgasm are completely incorrect and the only thing they do is sow confusion, both between men and women.
"Inability of a woman to reach orgasm". This is how Masters and Johnson, pioneers in the investigation of the nature of the human sexual response, defined anorgasmia.
A recent study from Columbia University (United Kingdom) has shown that it is easier to resist the prohibited if we do it together with other people in the same situation. The results also corroborate the theory that when something is forbidden it captures our full attention.
"I like being spanked. Getting tied up is fun." Rihanna, the famous pop singer, confessed in 2011 to Rolling Stone magazine that she believed she was a bit of a masochist. However, these statements today no longer impact as much as those of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch did in 1780 in his work "The Venus of the Skins."
Danni Büchner is invited to Sam Dylan's Halloween party. But the "Goodbye Germany" emigrant has no desire for many other party guests. And find clear words.