Stuff You Should Know - What happens in the brain during an orgasm?
Episode Date: December 27, 2011Chuck and Josh test the limits of their decorum as they explore the physiology of an orgasm. Learn all about this inexplicably taboo subject (including how even women who are paralyzed can experience ...orgasms) in this episode of Stuff You Should Know. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. With me as always is Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
He's got a new haircut, everybody. Looks really good. You're gonna have to take my word for it.
Yep, short, high and tight. Yeah, high and tight makes it Stuff You Should Know. Chuck
got his ears lowered. Have you ever heard that? Yeah. I don't think anyone under 70 has ever
said that, though. Yeah, well, I just have. I took the cake. Yes. Speaking of, have you ever
heard of the origin of the word cakewalk? The term cakewalk? I wrote a blog on it. You should
check it out. Very surprising. I'll check it out. Very eye-opening. Again, tell us or just go to the
blog. Go to the blog. So, Chuck, are you ready? Yes. Chuck, I want to commend you.
Okay. Just a day ago, I woke up, checked my smartphone, and found an email, and you said,
how about these for Stuff You Should Know? And one of them was, what happens in the brain
during an orgasm? You mean a week ago? I'm sorry, last week. Yeah. What happens in the
brain during an orgasm? And I thought, oh, man, I don't know about that one. Like, we've got some
younger listeners. Like, are we qualified to talk about this stuff? We're not. I started sweating.
It was just, it was a wreck. It was a terrible way to wake up. And I emailed you and was like,
are you sure? And you said something that I thought was this is why I'm commending you.
You're like, look, man, we've done a lot of stuff on like really violent things,
which just off the top of my head shrunk at heads, our step-by-step guide to shrinking heads,
or Jack the Ripper cannibalism, Jack the Ripper. And we have, we've done a lot of stuff about
violent stuff. And you're like, and I don't want to just be able to talk about violent stuff,
but not be able to talk about sexuality like it's bad or worse than violence. Yeah, I don't want
to play ball with that scene. And that is very, especially in America. It's a scene. We just
celebrated Thanksgiving. We're a very puritanical country still. And that's absolutely true. Like,
violence is celebrated and okay. Sexuality is hidden and it's not okay. Right. And yeah,
I don't subscribe to that either. So I wanted to commend you for having that level of foresight,
insight, every kind of sight. Hey, thanks. And for suggesting we do this.
Thanks. Having said that, if you're a parent, if you're a younger listener, maybe you should
ask your parents, we're going to be very mature about this. But it's not going to be funny.
But if you don't think you want your kid listening to anything about orgasms, then
switch it off. Hey, man, you're the parent. We're not. It's up to you to decide when you
want your kid. Personally, I went to sex ed when I was either the fifth or sixth grade. So I learned
about this stuff when I was like from a teacher. I was like seventh or eighth. Really? I was younger.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, you're very experienced. I remember one very funny thing that happened. I
can't say it. I wish I could. Oh, yeah. Yeah. One kid in my class. I remember his name even. It was,
he asked a very funny question that he wouldn't mean to be funny. And but now that I'm older,
looking back, he was asking a legit question. And it was, it was funny. Yeah. Yeah. That was a great
story. Quite a tease. My imagination is running wild right now. All right, let's get to this.
Chuck. Yeah. Let's, this is a really, this is a bang up way to start a podcast like what happens
in the brain during an orgasm. Yeah. Defining orgasm from the Oxford English Dictionary. It's
dry. It's stayed. It's like clinical. It's perfect. It was perfect. Yeah. So let's do that.
The first one there, a sudden movement, spasm, contraction or convulsion, a surge of sexual
excitement. Yeah. That's pretty much on the head there. Right. Merriam-Webster, explosive discharge
of neuromuscular tension at the height of sexual arousal, usually accompanied by the ejaculation
of semen in the male and by vaginal contractions in the female. Right. And then famous smutpedler,
Dr. Alfred Kinsey. I'm sorry. Sex researcher, researcher Alfred Kinsey. What was the name
of the movie that Ray Fiennes played him in? Was it just Kinsey? It was Kinsey and it was
Liam Neeson. Oh, yeah. Ray Fiennes, Liam Neeson. Come on. He called an orgasm. It can be likened to
the crescendo or climax and sudden stillness achieved by an orchestra of human emotions.
Also, it could be compared to an explosion of tensions or the sneezing, which Shayna Freeman,
who wrote this article, took issue with. That's because it's not true. That's all myth. Like,
if you sneeze five times, it's like an orgasm or you'll have an orgasm. I don't think that's
it at all what he was saying. Well, no, but that is a myth now. That sense of tension and then
immediate relief that washes over your body following like a heavy sneeze. I think that's
what he was saying. Yeah, but there is an urban myth that if you sneeze like five or seven times
in a row, I don't think Kinsey Delton there have been myths. He's a scientist. I've been saying since then. So the point
of all this is that the orgasm, while it is this sensation that washes over your body, it's an
explosion of tensions. It's like sneezing. It's accompanied by ejaculation in men. There's all
these physiological experiences going on, but all of it is centered in the brain. The point is the
orgasm takes place in the brain and thanks to the Wonder Machine, we now know pretty much what's
going on in the brain. We don't fully understand orgasms, but we have a much clearer picture
than we did even 10 years ago, 20 years ago. Did you ever hear the Billy Connolly, you know,
the comedian? Yeah. He had one bit where he talked about when he learned, first learned of an orgasm
when he was like, you know, 12 years old, like some older friend of his or his brother or cousin
taught him like how to achieve it and what it was. And he's like, you know, I did it. It was the
best thing ever. And he said, and then he came back to me the next day and was like, you only
get 1000 of those. And he was like, the next week I had used them all up. Well, I don't know if it
was 1000. Then I don't even know if this is going to make it on the air. We'll find out. So let's
start clean. So okay, so we have a let's talk about where all this starts takes place. Orgasms
begin in the genitalia and they end in the brain. Yeah, pretty much. That's it. Or they begin in the
genitalia, go to the brain and then come back to the genitalia. Maybe or they begin in the brain
and then go to the genitalia and then back to the brain. We're going to get to the bottom of this.
But essentially, there's a lot of nerves involved in this. And there's, you know, you're not going
to be surprised to find that the genitalia, both male and female are extremely sensitive,
nerve wise. Apparently the clitoris has about 8000 nerve endings just in itself.
Comparatively speaking, the penis, a circumcised penis, as I understand it, has about 4000 nerve
endings in the whole thing, the glands. Oh, really? Yes. But and I didn't see this substantiated
anywhere, but an uncircumcised penis supposedly has like 25,000 nerve endings in it. Oh, that's
all propaganda. Yeah. Is that brought to you by the Circumcision Society or the anti-circumcision?
It was on one of the sites. And also that reminds me goes into the Circumcision Podcast. That was
a good one. Oh, yeah? Yeah. Did you just want to remind yourself that we can cover these things
without laughing? No, I just remembered that we did circumcision and they asked you. I thought
you were just like, I got to, I got to do this. I got to be able to say the word penis without
laughing. Penis glands. All right. So what happens is you got all these nerve endings
during intercourse and at climax, there will be messages sent through these large nerves
that run up your spinal cord, except for the vagus nerve, which is very important that we
mentioned that very bypasses the spinal cord and to the brain and tells the brain, hey,
this is great. This feels awesome. You want to, you want to do this again. Right. And there's
a different bundles are, I guess, stimulated in different areas, right? Yeah. So you've got like
the hypogastric nerve, which is located in the uterus and cervix in women and in the prostate
and men. Yes. So if you tickle these areas, you can conceivably achieve orgasm through the
hypogastric nerve. There's the pelvic nerve transmits from the vagina and cervix in women,
obviously. Right. And from the rectum of both sexes. Yeah. There's some overlap here. Go ahead
and say that next one. The pedundle nerve. Yeah. That's pudendle or pudendle. I'm not sure which.
Or pudendle. But either way, it's P-U-D-E-N-D-A-L. Right. That's the clitoris in women and the
scrotum and penis in men. So that's like kind of the, that's the well-established, long-understood
bundle of nerves. Is it? Yeah. Because the whole concept that a woman can even have an
orgasm is pretty recent. Sure. It's pretty new. Like the last century. Yeah. As far as science
goes. Yeah. You go to Europe and ask some lady a hundred years ago, 200 years ago, she's gonna be
like, what are you, stupid? Yes. Watch this. They're like, oh, that's what that's called.
We thought you just had the humors. Right. The humors. And then you've got the vagus nerve,
which we said bypasses the spinal cord. It transmits from the cervix, uterus, and vagina.
And 80 to 90% of the nerve fibers are sensory in the vagus nerve. So the vagus nerve is a money
nerve. And it controls more than just orgasms. Apparently, if you have vagus nerve damage,
you choke when you try to swallow liquids. Yeah, we talked about that in something.
We've said vagus before and it had to do with choking. I'll bet you it was either
competitive eating or sword swallowing. Yep. Sword swallowing. Was it sword swallowing?
Yep. Okay. So the vagus nerve is involved in swallowing as well as in orgasm. And I could
only find, obviously then, if it's involved in swallowing, it's in men and women. But I could
only find reference to the vagus nerve and orgasms in relation to female orgasms. Yeah,
me too. But we'll get to that later. And the vagus nerve, though, also, like you said,
that's a pretty important nerve. And it's very only recently discovered as far as orgasms go.
But the big key to it is that it bypasses the spinal cord and goes straight to the brain,
which is really, really good news for a certain subset of the human population, Chuck,
aka paraplegics. People who have suffered catastrophic spinal injuries. Even people
whose spines have been interrupted, like their spinal cords are no longer connected top and
bottom. They're totally paralyzed. They can still come to climax. Which is new because
that was, I mean, forever, they said, you know, those days are over for you pretty much. Right.
But thank you, Dr. Barry Kamizuruk. St. Kamizuruk, who we should just call this guy Dr. O because
he is the, as far as I can tell, the preeminent orgasm scientist. He and Whipple are. Dr. Whipple.
Yeah. Beverly Whipple. St. Beverly. That's what the paraplegic people call it. Of course they do.
They are at Rutgers at Rutgers, go scarlet nights, and they did some tests on women in 2004 who
had severed spinal cords and they found that they could feel stimulation in their cervix.
They could reach orgasm and they did the MRI and said, Hey, it looks like this thing is bypassing
the spinal cord. They're not just messing with us. Yeah. They're saying this is real.
Because the MRI machine lit up like it's supposed to. Right. And like you said,
they showed that the areas of the brain that respond to the vagus nerve were lighting up
especially. Yeah. And they're like, Oh, it's the vagus nerve. Which is, I mean, we're not
kidding around. That is great news because that's one of the most upsetting parts, I would imagine,
of spinal injury is to say goodbye to that part of your life, you know, to lose your sexuality
like that. One of my good friends dated a girl who was paralyzed from the waist down and she was
able to have an orgasm. Thank you, Vegas nerve. Yeah. The Vegas nerve is basically proof that
women are God's favorites. Oh, yeah. No, actually, we'll see that's quite the opposite.
That's right. I mean, the Vegas nerve is that's, it's pretty great for women. But overall,
dumb, lumbering men have it way better. Yeah, as we'll see. Okay.
The war on drugs impacts everyone whether or not you take America's public enemy. Number one is
drug abuse. This podcast is going to show you the truth behind the war on drugs. They told me
that I would be charged for conspiracy to distribute 2200 pounds tomorrow one. Yeah,
and they can do that without any drugs on the table. Without any drugs. Yes, they can do that.
The war on drugs is the excuse our government uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff.
Stuff that'll piss you off. The property is guilty. Exactly. And it starts as
guilty. It starts as guilty. Cops. Are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging?
They just have way better names for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being
robbed. They call civil acid.
Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
Who do we become when we travel? I have never flown without wearing a suit in time.
I refuse to do it. Who are we allowed to be? Those blue American passports as powerful as they are,
it doesn't work the same for everyone. And where is everybody going? I do love to
sit near the ocean and drink. Join me, Brendan Francis Nunnam, for Not Lost Chap,
a new season of the travel podcast that The New York Times, The Economist, and The Atlantic
named Best of the Year. In each episode of the new season, I'll share an audio postcard from
where I've been, talk to a travel writer about their work, and invite a famous frequent flyer
to come by and answer your travel questions. If I'm sitting in the seat and the person beside me
is acting irate, I'm going to call a flight attendant before I stick my size 13 foot
up their tiny ass. Ah, the joys of air travel. Listen to Not Lost on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcasts. So let's talk about the brain. Let's talk about
the Pleasure Center, aka Reward Circuit. Yeah. This is a pretty new, like the 1950s is when
they first kind of discovered this. And it seems like we talked about this too. They did
experiments on rats. They basically hooked them up in the Skinner Box and said, hey,
if you go push this button, you're going to get rewarded in a very pleasurable way in your brain.
There's like cocaine or something, wasn't it? I think so. And they found out that the rats really
loved it to the tune of about 700 button pushes an hour. Oh yeah. And they didn't eat anymore,
didn't want water anymore. They would just lay there. They'd just lay there and push this button.
And it wasn't cocaine. They had electrodes implanted in the brain's reward. So it was going and
just stimulating it every time. Well, no, but I think it had to do with study on drugs because
the Reward Center, like sexual arousal and the high from drugs is what a lot of it's going on there.
Well, not only that, eating, laughing, hanging out with other people, basically anything that
ensures our survival as a species or as an individual, the Reward Center has something
to do with it. And the whole point of the Reward Center is we get this release of dopamine,
this pleasurable, this pleasurable chemical that teaches us, wow, this feels really good. I want
to do that again. So I will survive. These rats died of exhaustion though, sadly. That's so crazy.
But that's where they discovered it in the 50s. And if we're going to talk about the
Pleasure Center, we should mention a few specific areas like the amygdala, right,
regulates your emotions. And we talk about the brain a lot. So this is sort of rehashed.
This is kind of like up there with fight or flight. Like we talked about the Reward Circuit
quite a bit. We do. Yeah. Because we like it. Well, it's a great circuit. I wish I had that
button. I'd be pushing it 700 times an hour. And I have to come along and be like, you need to stop,
dude. The the nucleus accumbens, which I don't think we've ever mentioned on the show. I think
we have. We have. And that controls the release of dopamine. It's part of the limbic system.
And this plays a really big role in sexual arousal. And like the high you feel from
from certain drugs. Gotcha. The VTA or the ventral tegmental area,
actually releases the dopamine. It takes its orders from the nucleus accumbens. Accumbens.
The cerebellum controls your muscle function. Muscles are very important in an orgasm.
And the pituitary gland. Here's this is a big one because it's not just dopamine,
this pleasure that you sense like it. You just, you know, it's not just pleasure. There's other
stuff going on. Like there's Tristesse crying after sex. Like that's not just pleasure. That's
you're overwhelmed with emotion sometimes. And that is thanks to our friend the pituitary gland,
which releases beta endorphins that decrease pain, oxytocin, which increase feelings of trust,
vasopressin, which increases bonding. And a lot of these same hormones and chemicals are
released when you give birth, when a woman gives birth as well, which apparently forms bonds
between mother and child. And also these things are released. I think like oxytocin is a lactation
chemical as well. Yeah. So both mother and child during breastfeeding bond. Yeah. Have like
basically you're overwhelmed with the sense of like, I really like you and I get this since you
like me too. So let's hang out. Yeah. Oxytocin is called the hormone of love and actually means
quick birth in Greek. And not only is it released during childbirth, but it sort of facilitates
childbirth. Gotcha. And nipple stimulation, it is released. And that's what makes you lactate.
Yeah. Which is pretty cool. And calmness, it reduces your anxiety, makes you calm. So oxytocin
up with oxytocin. Yeah. And vasopressin too has similar effects as well. So you've got all these
chemicals flooding your body. You've got your reward circuit going and all the right ways. Yeah.
And this is the orgasm basically, especially the female orgasm. We should say like the male
orgasm includes ejaculation and it's been long understood what's going on there. Right. But
like it's pretty much an A to B relationship. Yeah. But like I said, like it was pretty recent,
like the middle of last century that people that science came to really say like, okay,
all right, so this is real. Women aren't just trying to like get on board here. Like they really
are experiencing something. Yeah. And then in the late 90s and mid 2000s, a group of Dutch researchers
said, we're going to take this MRI. We're going to stick people in this MRI. We're going to bring
them to orgasm and we're going to watch what goes on in their brains. Yeah. Well, first they use the
PET scan. Okay. You're right. I'm sorry. And actually, since you mentioned men, you told me
in another email said this article is sexist because it only talks about women almost.
And I look that up. Apparently it's because the men's orgasm is so short. It's hard to study it.
Oh, okay. So it's like, boom, it's over. Whereas a woman can have a prolonged orgasm,
much easier to study that. Right. All right. So PET scan. So the PET scan. But think about this.
This is like the swing in a study. It's like Ken Casey. Yeah. You know, this is these test subjects
were brought to orgasm. Their brains were watched with PET scans later on MRIs. And what the Dutch
researchers found was that there really aren't that many differences in the brains between men
and women as far as the pleasure circuit goes. Yeah. They saw all the stuff they expected to see.
Apparently the brain, if you take a snapshot of maybe the peak of it during orgasm, peak
orgasm, and you compared it to a snapshot of the peak of a heroin dose, it looks 95% the same,
one of the Dutch researchers said. Yeah. But there are differences between men's orgasms
and women's orgasms as far as brain regions are concerned. And it's not really surprising
what they found when you hear it. It's kind of intuitive, you know. Well, the other thing that
they found was the same, though, was that the orbital frontal cortex shut down for both.
And that is the seat of reason and behavioral control in your brain. So it's no surprise
that that thing shuts down for both of us. You just completely lose control. Right. You're
enthralled by your orgasm. So the differences that you mentioned, when a woman had sex, the,
I had this so right earlier, pericaductal gray, PAG, is activated. And it says in here controls
fight or flight. I got more that it provokes your defense responses. And it's not necessarily
controlling fight or flight. You know, is that right? Is it activating and stimulating it?
I just said it, what I saw is that it provokes your defense responses, which is interesting.
Okay. Well, I mean, you can say defense responses, fight or flight. Yeah, that's true. It's part of
it, at least. Okay. The woman's brain showed decreased activity in the middle and hippocampus.
This one made sense to me. Deals of fear anxiety. So fear and anxiety are out the door all of a
sudden. Yeah, which makes sense because for a woman to have and enjoy sex, it takes just
physically speaking, it takes far more trust than it does for a man. Yeah. And emotionally,
right? You need to be relaxed. Exactly. In general. And then here was one that I thought was kind
of interesting. The part of the cortex associated with pain, the insular cortex, which is used to
judge like the ferocity basically of pain, like just how bad pain is, is activated. So it's basically
scanning, looking out for pain or judging the experience based on partially through the lens of
pain. I think everyone's been there, whether it's like tickling or anything. We're like,
oh, I hate that. I hate that. But I love that. I love that. That's a very fine line.
Sometimes. That is a very egalitarian interpretation. Thank you. Faking an organism,
not surprisingly. Of course, it doesn't use the same part of the brain. Yeah. There's
really bears almost no resemblance whatsoever. I didn't even think that should have been included.
I didn't either. But I was mad at Shayna Freeman for being sexist at the time when I read that.
So now that I look back on it, I still don't think it should have been included. That's right.
So Chuck, we've been giving all of the kudos and attention to people who have orgasms, no problem.
There are people out there who can't have orgasms. Anorgasmic. Yes, they have anorgasmia,
which is an inability to achieve anorgasm. One of the big culprits are SSRIs, serotonin
Something reuptake inhibitor. What was the other S? I can't ever remember. Selective.
Yeah. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, which keeps serotonin in your synapses longer,
so you cannot be depressed. The problem is it decreases the production, the natural
production of dopamine in your brain. Dopamine, obviously, is how we learn to enjoy and go do
something like achieving anorgasm again. So fortunately, once people wean themselves off
of SSRIs or start taking other drugs that increase dopamine production, usually that anorgasmia
goes away. Usually. Not all the time. No. Sadly, a very small percentage. I didn't get a number,
but I did see that it was uncommon, thankfully. Post SSRI sexual dysfunction means after you
have weaned yourself off and you're producing dopamine regularly, you're still not able to
achieve anorgasm. And they have no idea why. No. Because they're like your dopamine's working.
Like what? What's your problem? And this is thanks to Dr. O again, right? I believe so.
It's all over this stuff. He that's one of the main reasons he's studying the orgasm, by the way,
is not just to like, like, Oh, cool. Look at the brain. It's to help people that are an orgasmic
or who suffer from persistent sexual arousal syndrome, which sounds horrible. Yeah. That
means you're always sexually aroused, but you can achieve orgasm, right? Right. And like,
you're genuinely always sexually aroused. Dr. O looked at women who have PSAS and put them in
an MRI and looked at their brains and their brains are showing like, Yeah, I'm turned on right now.
I'm turned on right now for no good reason. I can't do anything about it, but I'm turned on
right now. And then even if I try to have an orgasm, I can't. So take a curse. But the science
supported it on the MRI, right? Right. Yeah. So I mean, these people were physically sexually
aroused and they couldn't do anything about it. He figured out that they can use like meditation
techniques apparently works. Basically, calming techniques apparently has an impact on decreasing
the sexual arousal. I think he's still trying to figure out the anorgasmia part.
The War on Drugs impacts everyone whether or not you take drugs. America's public enemy number
one is drug abuse. This podcast is going to show you the truth behind the war on drugs.
They told me that I would be charged for conspiracy to distribute 2200 pounds of marijuana.
Yeah. And they can do that without any drugs on the table. Without any drugs. Of course,
yes, they can do that. And I'm the prime example of that. The war on drugs is the excuse our
government uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff. Stuff that'll piss you off.
The property is guilty. Exactly. And it starts as guilty. It starts as guilty.
Cops. Are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging? They just have way better names
for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being robbed. They call civil
acid for it. Be sure to listen to the War on Drugs on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Who do we become when we travel?
I have never flown without wearing a suit until I refuse to do it. Who are we allowed to be?
Those blue American passports as powerful as they are, it doesn't work the same for everyone.
And where is everybody going? I do love to sit near the ocean and drink.
Join me, Brendan Francis-Nunum, for Not Lost Chat, a new season of the Travel Podcasts that
The New York Times, The Economist, and The Atlantic named best of the year. In each episode of the
new season, I'll share an audio postcard from where I've been, talk to a travel writer about
their work, and invite a famous frequent flyer to come by and answer your travel questions.
If I'm sitting in the seat and the person beside me is acting irate, I'm going to call
a flight attendant before I stick my size 13 foot up their tiny ass. Ah, the joys of air travel.
Listen to Not Lost on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Josh, did you know that some people can orgasm from being touched in other parts of their body,
other than the genitalia? I did know that. For instance, the nipples that happen sometimes,
they think that these sensations are transmitted to the same areas of the brain
as the ones that come from your genitals, and so it's just the brain saying, all right,
I'll give you a little bonus there. You know, it's lighting up the right part of the brain,
so here's an orgasm. Apparently also, knees, nose, people, there are apparently women out there who
can have orgasms just from imagery alone, no touching. Again, these people are in MRIs,
the brain is lighting up and they're saying, yep, science supports us. This woman is actually
having an orgasm from a no-touch encounter, which is crazy. The phantom limb thing is
what really gets me. Yeah, do you want to talk about that? Yeah, I mean, apparently some people can,
do they feel the orgasm in their phantom limb? Yes. It doesn't generate there.
So you know how you have when you experience an orgasm, Chuck? Do you know how it's
concentrated in your genitalia? I do know. Imagine if that sensation were in your foot,
like that's what felt good, just as easily could, right? Sure. Now imagine that your foot
had been amputated years before, but you're still feeling your orgasm in your phantom foot.
That's what they're talking about. That's nutty. Well, they think what happened is there's a
basically a map of your brain. The way we interpret it is as a map, it's called the
cortical homunculus. And the cortical homunculus is like, okay, this part of the body corresponds
to this part of the brain, like the nerves here correspond here. And apparently, if you suffer
an amputation, your brain is like, well, I need to rewire myself. I need to remap a little bit.
So I'm going to assign the sensation in the foot that's not there any longer to the genitalia.
So the brain can become confused by the genitalia being stimulated. That experience can be felt
in the amputated foot, for example. That's what scientists think right now. You can also say
that they have no idea what's going on, but people are reporting having orgasms in phantom limbs.
I think it's my new band name too. Yeah, cortical homunculus.
Oh, that's a good one. I've got some breaking news, Josh. Oh, wow. This is a surprise for you,
my friend. Okay. Dr. O is at it again. Yeah. And this was just released on the old AP wire
last week. Wow. November 18th. They kicked it up a notch and
then had ladies sit in the f MRI machine, which is even kicked up a notch from the regular MRI.
And they now have the first movie of the female brain as it approaches, experiences,
and recovers from an orgasm. Wow. So they put this couple of ladies actually,
and one of them talked about it. She did a little, I think she blocked about it.
She said that one of the problems in doing this obviously is you have to not move very
much at all because it'll disrupt the data. So they fitted her with a breathable plastic mesh
helmet that was screwed into the bed to keep her still. And Fidelio always got an eyes wide
shut for some reason. And they told her to practice being still while bringing herself
to climax. So she duct taped a kitty bell from her cats, what do you call it? The collar
onto her forehead. And for two weeks, practice bringing herself to climax without ringing that
bell. And she said, you know, I got good, good enough at it to successfully do this in the
experiment. And it was successful. So you can go on the internet now and look this up and watch
this video. The animation plays. You see activity building up in the genitalia area of the sensory
cortex like it should. Then activity is spreading to the limbic system. Then it spreads to the
limbic system, which is involved in emotion and long term memory. Then as the orgasm arrives,
activity shoots up in two parts of the brain, the cerebellum and the frontal cortex that control
the muscular tension. So all of a sudden, the muscles like contract really heavily. So that
shoots up during the orgasm. It reaches a peak in the hypothalamus. And that's when it releases
the oxytocin and all that good stuff and causes the uterus to contract. And I'm sorry, the
nucleus accumbens is that's also firing off during the peak. Yeah. Because controlling the release
of dopamine. Yeah. And then afterward, everything like you see it just goes, it goes from all colorful
back to the cold, dead blackness of your brain. The Doritos center starts becoming active.
So Chuck, there's a, there's a very big question that we haven't really answered.
We understand why men have orgasms. Why do women have orgasms?
Evolutionarily. But why? I mean, it doesn't make any sense. If it's an evolutionary adaptation,
like it is for men, then why is it so hard for some women to have orgasm? You know,
10% of women will go through their entire lifetimes without ever experiencing an orgasm.
How many? 10%. Wow. That's a lot. Yeah. So if it's evolutionary, that just completely pulls
the rug out of that whole idea because then it should be really easy for women and men. Right?
Yeah. Okay. So one of the ideas that's long been bandied about is the byproduct theory. Like,
you know why men have nipples? Because women have nipples. We're all humans. So at some point during
gestation or whatever, we still keep ours even though we don't need them. Men don't need nipples,
but we're humans and women need nipples. Speak for yourself. Makes sense. I don't use mine anymore.
Okay. They think that possibly the female orgasm is the same thing. Men and women are both humans.
Men need to have orgasm. So women do as byproduct. In this really weird study that came out last
year of twins, they studied same-sex twins and opposite-sex twins. And same-sex twins
had similar orgasm patterns. Right? Okay. Opposite-sex twins who, if it is just a byproduct,
should have the same or similar orgasm patterns. It didn't hold up.
So where does that leave us? We have no idea. They think that it could possibly be an evolutionary
remnant. Like it was strategic to our survival at some point in the distant past. And it's just
a relic that kind of hangs around, which is kind of a depressing thought because then that means
we're watching it as it's endangered and it's growing extinct. And that's sad. And I think that
it needs to be snatched back from the grips of natural selection.
Well, some things maybe just shouldn't be studied. Maybe you should just, I don't know,
I'm sure there's women out there saying, just put the studies away. Yeah. Let's just look at it as a
big, as a big bonus. Right. And that's thanks big guy. That's when Dr. O flicks the switch and
the disco ball comes down from the ceiling. So if you want to know more about orgasms and see
some pretty cool stock images of lit brains and things like that, you can type in what happens
in the brain during an orgasm. You probably just type in orgasm in the search bar at
howstuffworks.com and it will bring up some interesting cool stuff. Sure. And I said search bar,
I believe. So that means it's time for a listener mail.
Josh, before we move on, we have to announce, I believe, one final time about our contest.
This is the last time because the contest ends December 31st, I believe, right? You have to
enter to win, as they say. Yeah. And you have to enter only through Facebook. Yes. You have to
like the howstuffworks.com Facebook page, not the stuff you should know page. We cannot say this
enough, yet still people write in on our stuff. You should know wall and say, where do you enter?
Yeah. Howstuffworks.com like it. You have to enter a few small details, nothing too
obtrusive, right? Right. Nothing too intrusive. What do I say? Obtrusive. You have to the end
of the year through December 31st to enter. We're going to announce the winner the first
week of the year. What a great way to start your year off. Exactly. Like knowing that you're coming
to meet a couple of grand prize is you get to fly to Atlanta up to $500 airfare covered,
stay in a hotel covered, get an AmEx gift card for $100. For like nail clippers because you
can't fly with those. That's right. And if you refer someone, you can tweet it out or say,
this is my Facebook status as I just entered this. If you refer someone and they win after
they enter, then you win a Kindle Fire. And you don't have to keep track of that. We have like
people who track those metrics. There's an algorithm. Yeah. So it's a pretty cool contest,
pretty straightforward. But we get to go to lunch. I don't think we said that. You come to the office,
you get a tour. Yeah. We take you to lunch. We take you to lunch. Yeah, with Jerry. Jerry's coming.
We're not going to make you spend that AmEx gift card on it. That's for you. Although if they
want to buy me nail clippers, I'm not going to stop them. And sorry to those of you in other
countries. I know it's a rub that you have to be in the United States here, but we can't win your
lotteries or your contest in New Zealand. So you can't win ours. It's just the way contests work. Yes. And just
go to the How Stuff Works Facebook page. And I'm sure there'll be some sort of something up that
says, hey, you should enter this contest. Agreed. Okay. So I think we should get on with it. That's
right, Josh. This is about Jean Patton thing, I believe. And it's from Jim in New Jersey. Okay.
Garden State. I loved your Patton podcast, guys. It dovetailed. Love that word. Very nicely with
the Tech Stuff Patton podcast. Oh, really? Yeah. That's what he says. I'm of the opinion that if
you construct a new gene, then you can patent it. However, if you discover a gene already existing
in nature, then I'm not sure that you should be able to patent it. Yeah. This is just Jim's opinion.
I like his opinion. Maybe you can patent the process of identifying the gene. Seems reasonable.
Maybe you can patent a specific use of the gene, such as for testing, which you clearly covered as
being controversial. However, you shouldn't be able to quote, own the gene. What if it has another
use? That's a good point. Yeah. In the epilogue on the immortal life of Henrietta Lacks, Rebecca
Skloot describes a disturbing scenario. If you provide a sample of our DNA to a medical professional
of your own DNA, and it is found to have a mutation that's the foundation of the next wonder drug,
you are entitled to nothing. Yeah. So legally, your sample is considered trash unless you've
prearranged some legal arrangement. That means you've abandoned it. That's like Henrietta Lacks.
Are you familiar with her? No. I've heard that, though. Have we talked about this? Yeah. She's
kind of famous in this really weird way. She's like an African-American lady from the 40s or 50s.
And somehow she donated like her blood or some tissue or something to science. And it became the
basis of like all scientific research after that. So like all these breakthroughs and drugs and cancer
blockers and like all of this pharmaceutical research was based on this culture that's still
around. Her line is still around. That's why she's immortal. And her fit, yes. And her family has
gotten nothing from it. Interesting. And, you know, companies have made hundreds of billions
of dollars off of this lady's life. Wow. Like her biology and they've gotten nothing. I haven't
read the book, but I've heard nothing but good things about it. I'll have to check that out.
So that's from Jim in New Jersey. Thanks, Jim. Thanks, Henrietta Lacks.
Okay. 1940s, you said? I think 40s or 50s. Look that up. And it's probably even worse than that.
I'm sure than the way I described it, but I will probably end up reading it. Yeah. Okay.
Okay. I'm done. I'm ready. Let's finish this. That was a good one. Well done.
Well done to you too, buddy. We kept it very mature. Tip of the cap to you too, sir. Doffing
it as well. If you want to contact me and Chuck, you can tweet to us at SYSK podcast. You can visit
us on Facebook at facebook.com. So stuff you should know. And you can send us an email at
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