When we think about the female orgasm usually remember how you feel or visualize how the body reacts to the pleasure and ecstasy. And now thanks to a new study by Rutgers University and published in the Society for Neuroscience , we can also observe what really happens in the brain during this time.
As reported by Huffington Post , researchers used a woman to monitor their movements through a brain magnetic resonance imaging machine (MRI by its initials in English), that while self-stimulated and received pulses sex. In this way they could take pictures of your brain every two seconds through the 80 different regions of the same. Then those images were placed in order to create a video that shows exactly each process step. They also set out the levels of excitement through a variety of colors ranging from dark red to yellow. With these data, scientific experts now seek to understand why it is more difficult for a woman to achieve orgasm compared to men and how to understand the body's reactions to pleasure.