The brain region linked to genital touch in women has been discovered by scientists, and it appears to be more developed in women who have sex regularly.
The research, which was recently published in the Journal of Neuroscience, looked at the relationship between touch and cerebral development in 20 adult females.
As part of the research, female volunteers – between the ages of 18 and 45 – had their clitorises stimulated by a vibrating object placed above their underwear, while their brains were scanned.
Researchers also asked female volunteers how frequently they had had sex over the past year.
As the device vibrated, the somatosensory cortex region of the brain was activated.
Researchers then measured the thickness of that brain area, finding it was bigger in females who reported having more sex.
“We found an association between the frequency of genital intercourse and the thickness of the individually mapped genital field,” explains study co-author Dr Christine Heim – a professor of medical psychology at Charite University Hospital in Berlin.
This means that the larger the region of the brain, the more sex a woman has. This isn’t the first study to look into the cognitive benefits of sex.
In 2016, researchers at McGill University in Canada discovered that young women who have regular sex have a better memory than their less sexually active counterparts.
Source: TheBBCghana.Com