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None of those studies/polls/surveys do they conclude that 70%/75%/80% of women cannot have orgasms by penetration alone. At best, they say difficulties achieving.
You didn't read any of the studies, or the articles.
http://www.onemedical.com/blog/live-well/female-orgasm/
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Only about 25 percent of women can achieve orgasm through intercourse alone; most need clitoral stimulation as well. According to professor and author Elisabeth Lloyd’s book “The Case of the Female Orgasm,” a comprehensive analysis of 33 studies over the past 80 years reveals that only a quarter of women regularly and reliably experience orgasm from intercourse alone.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/al ... -statistic
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Only 25 percent of women are consistently orgasmic during vaginal intercourse.
This bears repeating: Only one-quarter of women reliably experience orgasm during intercourse-no matter how long it lasts, no matter what size the man's penis, and no matter how the woman feels about the man or the relationship.
This statistic comes not from just one study, but from a comprehensive analysis of 33 studies over the past 80 years
I want you to pay attention to this. one-quarter of women reliably experience orgasm with penetration alone. That does not mean others cannot. And again, these are surveys and not scientific studies.
http://www.lehmiller.com/blog/2013/2/1/ ... sm-fr.htmlQuote:
I often see statistics that indicate 50% of women can't orgasm or 75% can't orgasm from penetration alone. Can you point me to the sources of said statistics and could you explain what exactly "penetration alone" means?
Thanks for your question. Unfortunately, I cannot point you to a scientific source for these statistics because I am not sure where they came from and I don't think they are completely accurate. That said, let’s first address your question about whether there are some women who just can’t seem to reach orgasm at all. Although the exact numbers vary quite a bit across studies, there are indeed some women who report never having climaxed in their entire lives. For example, this number was 10% in Alfred Kinsey’s pioneering research on human sexuality in the 1940s and 50s [1], and 3% in a recent national survey in Sweden [2]. Most other studies I have seen have yielded numbers in between. Thus, the statistic you heard about half of women being anorgasmic (i.e., lacking the ability to orgasm) simply has no basis in reality.
As for your other question about whether a majority of heterosexual women cannot reach orgasm through “penetration alone,” there is probably a bit more truth to that one. Let me first clarify that when we’re talking about “penetration alone,” we are referring to a woman’s ability to climax solely on the basis of penile movements inside the vagina during intercourse without providing any type of direct clitoral stimulation with a hand, vibrator, etc.
Now, as for that 75% statistic, I have seen it on a lot of news and advice websites (see here for an example from ABC News). However, all of these websites cite it as a statement of fact and do not back it up with a scientific source. So, let’s see what the research says. For instance, if we consider the Hite Report from the 1970s (a North American study that sampled approximately 2,000 women) results indicated that among those women who reported having had at least one orgasm before and who indicated being sexually active, 30% reported regularly reaching orgasm during intercourse, 12% rarely reached orgasm, 19% only reached orgasm if their clitoris was simultaneously stimulated, and 29% reported never orgasming during intercourse under any circumstances [3]. In the aforementioned Swedish study, the questions were asked somewhat differently, but researchers found that 55% of the women reported having reached orgasm during intercourse solely from penile movements at least once before [2].
Thus, when you average across these two studies and the others that I have seen, it looks like around half of heterosexual women are at least sometimes orgasmic as a result of penetration alone, whereas the other half either require added clitoral stimulation or other sexual activities in order to climax. So, based on the evidence I’ve seen, the 75% figure that’s frequently thrown around is probably a bit too high.
Arch, you're saying that all of these studies exist but you haven't named a source. You haven't provided a link to the scientist's paper that described how he/she has come to a conclusion. I know you can't do it because they don't exist. Name a source, not an article talking about it or listing the number of studies. You talk about 33 over 80 years, be intellectually honest enough to name just one. Name a source that says 75%/80% of women CANNOT have an orgasm by penetration alone. Then we can actually read the study and see how they came to their conclusion. That's real science. Until then, your science is just as unreliable as the links that you've provided.
If you do name one, I apologize for saying that I'm arguing against stupid in advanced.