While it is usually men who are deemed to chase sex the most, it turns out that it may in fact be the fairer sex who take the lead when it comes to enjoyment.

But how did the researchers come to this conclusion?

Apparently, this extra enjoyment stems from the fact that women are able to experience deeper and more varied orgasms than men.

The new study, conducted by researchers from Concordia University, looked into how women are turned on and found that there’s are at least four orgasmic zones on the female body.

These orgasmic areas include the clitoris, the internal region around the G-spot and the cervix - as well as non-genital areas, such as the nipples.

In a statement, the study’s senior author Jim Pfaus said: “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.

“It is likely that women have an enormous capacity to experience orgasms of many different types.

“The subjective experience of it is not necessarily the same for each woman, and can even be different each time a woman has one. Those differences span physiology and psychology.”

Jim now hopes that the research will prove how different the female orgasm is from male ejaculation.

He continued: “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.”

Earlier in the year, we reported on how women could achieve a full-body orgasm by employing certain tactics in the bedroom.

To achieve this, it was recommended for women to concentrate on ‘opening up’ their entire body rather than just what's going on "down there" as well as trying to imagine that there is a build-up of energy running through them.



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