For the first time, a team of mathematicians has developed a model that can map the best way for men to achieve the sexual climax.
After analyzing decades of data on physiological and psychological activationresearchers say they have found the ideal conditions needed to achieve orgasm.
“We developed the first successful mathematical model performance,” said mathematician Konstantin Blyuss, a leading researcher of the university of sussex In the UK.
“Our findings cover both physiological and psychological aspects needed to reach the climax. They reinforce and mathematically prove existing studies on the psychology of sex.”
Of course, there is no one size fits all when it comes to sex and sexual satisfaction, so take it with a grain of salt. In fact, this is how it gets covered: not guaranteeing an orgasm for everyone every time.
Instead they just wait skew the odds a little more in favor depending on the data, explains the research, the results of which were published in chaos: an interdisciplinary journal of nonlinear science.
The formulas themselves are actually pretty intense math stuff that it won’t help much in the heat of the moment. (The research was inspired by using math to improve sports performance.)
However, the researchers came to one conclusion: “Too much psychological arousal in the beginning can make it more difficult to reach orgasm” concluded the researchers.
“It’s a key finding,” says Blyuss. “Simply put, our results can be summarized as ‘don’t think too much’“.
More importantly though, the team was able to do something that had never been done before: find a way to use mathematical models to predict whether someone will orgasm.
Of course, the elephant in the room here is why the researchers looked at human males, which you usually find it much easier pinnacle of others.
But many of them also experience sexual dysfunction at some point in their lives, and tend to have a much easier arousal cycle, so it was the best starting point for researchers to create these equations.
“Our results shed some light on a socially taboo subject, which we believe may have useful applications for the clinical treatment of sexual dysfunction,” said mathematician and co-investigator Yuliya Kyrychko, also of the University of Sussex.
“With what we’ve learned from this study, we aim to model mathematically female sexual response which is physiologically and mathematically more complex than the male response,” he added.
The researchers developed the equations by analyzing data on the four phases of the male arousal cycle: arousal, plateau, orgasm and resolution.
“We can find optimal stochastic escape paths that show how a sexual response progresses to orgasm. under the influence of small stochastic disturbances“, conclude Blyussa and Kyrychko.
Source: Scientific Advisory
Source: Clarin
Mary Ortiz is a seasoned journalist with a passion for world events. As a writer for News Rebeat, she brings a fresh perspective to the latest global happenings and provides in-depth coverage that offers a deeper understanding of the world around us.