Mens Face On Girl Orgasm

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Mens Face On Girl Orgasm
This Video Features 100 Peoples’ Orgasm Faces
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If you've ever wanted to see a random group of strangers' "O" faces—ya know, just for funsies—your lucky day has arrived. This WatchCut video features a series of on-camera participants mimicking the way they act and sound when they have an orgasm . (Yes, really.)
It's a bit reminiscent of that famous scene in When Harry Met Sally when, ahem, everyone wants what Sally's having. While the WatchCut clip doesn't feature the Hollywood magic of Sally's experience, it's peppered with real-life humor that just can't be recreated in a movie.
It appears that the participants weren't told about the video's subject matter ahead of time, because some of them seemed pretty surprised by what the filmmakers asked them to do. There was some brief hesitation as participants tried to get ~in the mood~, but ultimately, everyone was happy to offer up their best impression, while sharing some giggles and funny comments along the way. The result is a full one minute and 53 seconds of both men and women experiencing hella (fake) sexual pleasure . Because why not, right? If you're curious, watch below—and prepare to feel kinda awkward.
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Within-culture convergence of facial expression models of pain and orgasm (colors indicate agreement by participants, red with higher agreement)
Distribution of facial movements across models of pain and orgasm.
Comparison of facial expression models of pain and orgasm.
Perceptual discrimination of facial expression models of pain and orgasm. Each color-coded shape represents an individual ob- server facial expression model
Cross-cultural comparison of facial expression models of pain and orgasm.
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Beth Mole
Beth is Ars Technica’s health reporter. She’s interested in biomedical research, infectious disease, health policy and law, and has a Ph.D. in microbiology.
Email beth.mole@arstechnica.com
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Beth Mole
- 10/10/2018, 12:10 AM
In the unspoken language of love, the face you make at the pinnacle of pleasure may have something of an accent based on where you come from.
People from Western and East Asian cultures had consistently different ideas of what facial expressions indicate the moment of orgasm , researchers found in a study published Monday in PNAS . Specifically, Western participants expected widened eyes and gaping mouths, while East Asian participant’s ideas culminated in a slight, tight-lipped smile.
But contrary to those cultural climaxes, the look of dire pain had universal contortions. Participants from both cultures recognized the apex of anguish by inward-pulling facial expressions, such as lowered brows, wrinkled noses, and raised cheeks.
The researchers behind the study—led by psychologists at the University of Glasgow in Scotland—argue that the new data disputes earlier conclusions that faces of physical pain and sexual pleasure are indistinguishable. “This finding is counterintuitive, because facial expressions are widely considered to be a powerful tool for human social communication and interaction,” they note.
With their data coming to a head with different facial expressions, they speculate that culture-specific expectations of o-faces and p-faces could one day be useful to study human interactions. Those nuanced expression could offer an intimate peek into our “complex social world and provide a richer, more accurate account of social communication.”
To bang out accurate representations of orgasmic and pained facial expressions, the researchers turned to mathematic modeling. They set up a dynamic face-movement generator which randomly selected a set of nuanced facial movements from a core set of 42. Those core movements included things like a mouth stretch, eyelid raising, and jaw dropping. The researchers then displayed those random sets (including one to four facial movements) onto a photorealistic face to produce quickie animations.
The researchers then had 40 participants from each of the two cultures (80 total) look through 3,600 of those animations each. The participants labeled every one of the animations as showing either “pain,” “orgasm,” or “other.” They then ranked the animation's intensity from “very weak” to “very strong.”
From there, the researchers mashed the results within the two cultural groups and let loose assembled facial models for orgasm and pained faces. They had 104 other participants (26 people of both sexes from each of the two cultures) look though them. For this group, the models were each displayed on photorealistic faces of the same race as the participant but the opposite sex. The observers had to discriminate if they thought the face represented pain or orgasm and how well it did at either. The modeled representations were effective, the researchers found: the participants were in consistent agreement about what looked like pain and what looked like pleasure.
With the participant-confirmed representations of o- and p- faces, the researchers then compared how they differed—or didn’t. They found that the pained models had similar inward-pulling facial expressions, while the pleasure models were more culture-specific.
The authors speculate that those differences could be explained by culture-specific expectations and preferences for overt excitement and content calm. More specifically, they explain:
These cultural differences correspond to current theories of ideal affect that propose that Westerners value high arousal-positive states such as excitement and enthusiasm, which are often associated with wide-open eye and mouth movements, whereas East Asians tend to value low arousal-positive states, which are often associated with closed-mouth smiles.
They’ll need more data to back up that hypothesis and confirm their results. But, they add, with new technologies decoding facial movements, such data should be easier to come by in the future.
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Eve Peyser
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It'll make you cringe, but you won't be able to look away.
As sexy as sex is, the faces we make when we have an orgasm aren't always pretty. In a video posted by YouTube user wickydkewl , we see what people look like when they're, well, coming. Except in slow motion, because life is often cruel and unfair.
The poster writes, "This video is so uncomfortable to watch. Which is exactly why I think it's so important to watch. So proud of the participants... they are super brave."
Hard to watch, indeed. Brave? The jury's still out on that one.
Follow Eve on Twitter and Instagram .
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