According to wikipedia, Orgasm (from Greek ὀργασμός orgasmos "excitement, swelling"; also sexual climax) is the sudden discharge of accumulated sexual excitement during the sexual response cycle, resulting in rhythmic muscular contractions in the pelvic region characterized by sexual pleasure. Experienced by males and females, orgasms are controlled by the involuntary or autonomic nervous system. They are often associated with other involuntary actions, including muscular spasms in multiple areas of the body, a general euphoric sensation and, frequently, body movements and vocalizations. The period after orgasm (known as the refractory period) is often a relaxing experience, attributed to the release of the neurohormones oxytocin and prolactin as well as endorphins (or "endogenous morphine").
Female orgasm has perplexed scientists, fuelled an equality movement and propelled Meg Ryan to fame. Now researchers say they might have found its evolutionary roots.
The purpose of the euphoric sensation has long puzzled scientists as
it is not necessary for conception, and is often not experienced by
women during sex itself. But scientists in the US have come up with an
answer. Human female orgasm, they say, might be a spin-off from our
evolutionary past, when the hormonal surges that accompany it were
crucial for reproduction.
“It is important to stress that it didn’t look like the human female
orgasm looks like now,” said Mihaela Pavličev, co-author of the study
from Cincinnati children’s hospital. “We think that [the hormonal surge]
is the core that was maybe modified further in humans.”
Writing in the journal JEZ-Molecular and Developmental Evolution,
Pavličev and co-author Günter Wagner from Yale University describe how
they delved into the anatomy and behaviour of a host of placental
mammals to uncover the evolutionary origin of female orgasm, based on
the hormonal surges associated with it.
In mammals such as cats and rabbits, these surges occur during sex
and play a crucial role in signalling for eggs to be released from the
female’s ovaries. By contrast in a variety of other mammals, including
humans and other primates, females ovulate spontaneously.
By tracing these mechanisms of ovulation across the evolutionary tree
of mammals, the authors found that so-called “male-induced ovulation”
predates spontaneous ovulation, with spontaneous ovulation likely to
have arisen in the common ancestor of primates and rodents around 75
million years ago.
That, they say, suggests that human female orgasm could have its
roots in a mechanism for the release of eggs during sex – a mechanism
that became redundant with the evolution of spontaneous ovulation, with
female orgasm potentially going on to acquire other roles.
“There is a lot of discussion about whether it could have any
functions like in bonding behaviour and things like that – so we cannot
exclude that it actually has co-opted some other function after it lost
its function in reproduction,” said Pavličev.
The authors say the theory is backed up by a comparison of the
position of the clitoris, which gives rise to orgasms, in different
mammals. Species that rely on hormonal surges during sex to ovulate tend
to have a clitoris inside or near the female sex canal, making it more
likely to be stimulated during sex. But, the authors note, those that
ovulate spontaneously have the clitoris further away.
That, says Pavličev, also helps to explain why many women do not have
orgasms during sex itself. “It seems very natural not to automatically
accompany orgasm with copulation,” she said.
David Puts from Pennsylvania State University said the new theory is
plausible although, he stresses, it only looks at the hormonal component
of female orgasm. “Of course, it is difficult or impossible to
investigate sexual pleasure in nonhuman animals,” he said.
But, he adds, the new research goes a long way to boosting out
understanding of the ancestral form of human female orgasm. “From there,
we can explore how these components have changed over evolutionary time
in response to putative selection pressures,” he said.
Elisabeth Lloyd, professor of biology at Indiana University and
author of The Case of the Female Orgasm, also described the research as
important. “I think they are on to some pretty interesting ideas tracing
back what occurs today as orgasm and seeing where it came from,” she
said.
But, says Lloyd, she is yet to be convinced by Wagner and Pavličev’s
theory, not least because it does not take into account neurological and
muscular aspects of human female orgasm. What’s more, she says, very
little is known about orgasms in the females of other species.
Instead, Lloyd favours the theory that female orgasms are simply a
happy quirk of embryo development. “It is only at eight weeks that there
is a surge of male hormones that turns the genitals into male
genitals,” she said. While men need to orgasm in order to transfer
sperm, women, said Lloyd, end up with the nerve and muscle tissues for orgasm as “a fantastic bonus”.
“It all seems to be rather purposeless – except for the enjoyment,
obviously,” she said. “It doesn’t mean it is not important, it just
means it doesn’t have an evolutionary purpose.”
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