Concordia: The nature of a woman’s orgasm has been a source of debate for over a century. Since the Victorian era, the pendulum has swung from the vagina to the clitoris, and to some extent back again. Today, the debate is stuck over whether an orgasm can be produced
through vaginal stimulation alone, or if arousal of the external
clitoris is always necessary. A new review by Concordia researchers, published in Socioaffective Neuroscience & Psychology, details the vast potential women have to experience orgasms from one or more sources of sensory input.
In the review, senior author Jim Pfaus, a psychology professor from the Faculty of Arts and Science, and his co-authors — Mayte Parada, a postdoctoral fellow at
McGill University who undertook the research while pursuing her PhD at
Concordia, as well as Concordia graduate students Gonzalo Quintana
Zunino and Conall Mac Cionnaith — look into the evolution of the
clitoral versus vaginal orgasm debate.
They arrive at a new understanding of the female orgasm that
incorporates the external clitoral glans, the internal region around the
G-spot, the cervix and sensory stimulation of non-genital areas such as
the nipples.
“With experience, stimulation of one or all of these triggering zones
are integrated into a ‘whole’ set of sensory inputs, movements, body
positions, arousals and cues related to context,” Pfaus says.
“That combination of sensory input is what reliably induces pleasure
and orgasm during masturbation and intercourse. That said, we think it’s
likely this changes across the lifespan, as women experience different
kinds of orgasms from different types of sensations in different
contexts and with different partners.”
The article explains that the distinction between different orgasms
is not between sensations of the external clitoris and internal vagina,
but between levels of what a woman understands a “whole” orgasm to
consist of.
This depends firstly on her experience with direct stimulation of the
external clitoris, internal clitoris and cervix. But it also relates to
knowledge of the arousing and erotic cues that predict orgasm,
knowledge of her own pattern of movements that lead to it and experience
with stimulation of multiple external and internal genital and
non-genital sites — for example, lips, nipples, ears, neck, fingers and,
yes, toes.
“Orgasms don’t have to come from one site, nor from all sites. And
they don’t have to be the same for every woman, nor for every sexual
experience even in the same woman, to be whole and valid.”
Pfaus hopes that this article will drive home the fact that the
female orgasm is not simply a different version of the reproductive
model of male ejaculation.
“Unlike men, women can have a remarkable variety of orgasmic
experiences, which evolve throughout the lifespan. A woman’s erotic body
map is not etched in stone, but rather is an ongoing process of
experience, discovery and construction.”