Existence of the G-spot has not been proven, nor has the source of female ejaculation.
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Existence of the G-spot has not been proven, nor has the source of female ejaculation.
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The G-spot area has been described as needing direct stimulation, such as two fingers pressed deeply into it.
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G-spot vibrators are made from the same materials as regular vibrators, ranging from hard plastic, rubber, silicone, jelly, or any combination of them.
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The level of vaginal penetration when using a G-spot vibrator depends on the woman, because women's physiology is not always the same.
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Professor of genetic epidemiology, Tim Spector, who co-authored research questioning the existence of the G-spot and finalized it in 2009, hypothesizes thicker tissue in the G-spot area; he states that this tissue may be part of the clitoris and is not a separate erogenous zone.
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G-spot amplification is performed by attempting to locate the G-spot and noting measurements for future reference.
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Petra Boynton, a British scientist who has written extensively on the G-spot debate, is concerned about the promotion of the G-spot leading women to feel "dysfunctional" if they do not experience it.
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G-spot proponents are criticized for giving too much credence to anecdotal evidence, and for questionable investigative methods; for instance, the studies which have yielded positive evidence for a precisely located G-spot involve small participant samples.
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The urethral sponge which is hypothesized as the G-spot, contains sensitive nerve endings and erectile tissue.
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G-spot did dismiss the orgasmic definition of the G-spot that emerged after Ernst Grafenberg, stating that "there is no anatomical evidence of the vaginal orgasm which was invented by Freud in 1905, without any scientific basis".
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O'Connell stated that focusing on the G-spot to the exclusion of the rest of a woman's body is "a bit like stimulating a guy's testicles without touching the penis and expecting an orgasm to occur just because love is present".
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G-spot stated that it "is best to think of the clitoris, urethra, and vagina as one unit because they are intimately related".
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Surveys found that a majority of women believe a G-spot actually exists, although not all of the women who believed in it were able to locate it.
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