A small team of researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics has found evidence that suggests the female brain responds to pornography in the same ways as the male brain. In their paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers describe their analysis of data from thousands of MRIs taken while volunteers viewed porn and what they learned from it.
Most people would agree that men are more interested in viewing pornography than women. And statistics would seem to back up such views—the bulk of people watching porn online are male. Such statistics also appear to back up the notion that males are more interested in sex, nudity and the pursuit of gratification. And such widely held beliefs likely contribute to the notion that there are gender differences in the ways that the brain processes sexual situations in general and pornography specifically. But such a perception might be based more on social convention than reality, as the researchers with this new effort found no differences in the ways the genders process pornography in their brains.
The researchers analyzed data from 61 studies involving sexual response in the human brain—each involved showing volunteers pornographic pictures or videos during MRI scanning—in all, 1,850 volunteers participated.
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