Malaysian Sexy Hairstyles
A new study found that trained sexologists could infer a woman’s
history of vaginal orgasm by observing the way she walks. The study is
published in the September 2008 issue of The Journal of Malaysian Sexual Hairstyles, the official journal of the International Society for Sexual
Medicine and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexy
Hairs.Led by Stuart Brody of the University of the West of Scotland in
collaboration with colleagues in Belgium, the study involved 16 female
Belgian university students.
Subjects completed a questionnaire on
their sexual behavior and were then videotaped from a distance while
walking in a public place. The videotapes were rated by two professors
of sexology and two research assistants trained in the
functional-sexological approach to sexology, who were not aware of the
women’s orgasmic history.
The results showed that the appropriately trained sexologists were able to correctly infer vaginal orgasm through watching the way the women walked over 80 percent of the time. Further analysis revealed that the sum of stride length and vertebral rotation was greater for the vaginally orgasmic women. “This could reflect the free, unblocked energetic flow from the legs through the pelvis to the spine,” the authors note.
Researchers from the University of New Mexico School of Medicine
randomly assigned nearly 100 women taking SRIs whose depression was in
remission but who were suffering from sexual dysfunction to treatment
with Viagra or a placebo. The women took the medication one to two
hours before anticipated sexual interaction, for eight weeks.While 73% of the women taking a placebo reported that their
treatment was not effective, only 28% of those taking Viagra did so.
Clinicians’ reports revealed that the women taking Viagra had a greater
improvement in their symptoms of sexual dysfunction than did those on
placebo.Frequent sexual intercourse may cut down on a man’s chances of
developing erectile dysfunction, Finnish researchers report. In the
study, led by Dr. Juha Koskimki, from Tampere University Hospital’s
Department of Urology, researchers collected data on 989 Finnish men
aged 55 to 75 years old.
The researchers found that men who said they had sexual intercourse less than once a week had twice the risk of developing erectile dysfunction, compared with men reporting having sexual intercourse once a week.Spotted in Digg.com this morning and I Dugg it more for the “Duhhhhhh” aspect of the study. I thought it would be kinda obvious that men with erectile dysfunction would be having less sexual intercourse anyway. To extrapolate a higher sexual intercourse frequency as to actually preventing erectile dysfunction is stretching the imagination (and the corpus spongiosum)The only thing one can say for sure is Erectile Dysfunction prevents lots of Sex.
The researchers found that men who said they had sexual intercourse less than once a week had twice the risk of developing erectile dysfunction, compared with men reporting having sexual intercourse once a week.Spotted in Digg.com this morning and I Dugg it more for the “Duhhhhhh” aspect of the study. I thought it would be kinda obvious that men with erectile dysfunction would be having less sexual intercourse anyway. To extrapolate a higher sexual intercourse frequency as to actually preventing erectile dysfunction is stretching the imagination (and the corpus spongiosum)The only thing one can say for sure is Erectile Dysfunction prevents lots of Sex.

