For years the story on rat sex has been this: the male seeks above all
else to ejaculate quickly, and once he has done it with one female, he
is eager to move on to new partners. The female, meanwhile, seeks to
extend the sex encounter through "pacing".  A new study finds
that if pacing is slow enough, the male will prefer that familiar
partner to someone new. The wait, it seems, makes the female more
attractive.



"It's an awful lot like what we were thought  in high
school," says Concordia University psychologist James Pfaus, who
co-authored the study with Nafissa Ismail, the graduate student who
conceived it.



The experiment made innovative use of standard research devices called
pacing chambers which are cages with dividers having either one or four
holes big enough to let a female rat through but too small for the
larger male. Thus, the female can join or leave the male, allowing her
to significantly lengthen her arousal and, studies have shown, her
chance of pregnancy. But the mating rituals last longer in the one-hole
chambers, because the male, eager to get at the female, often sticks his
big head in the hole, blocking her only passage back to his side and
delaying her return.



The researchers let 20 couples mate in one-hole chambers and 20 in
four-hole chambers, then they placed each couple, along with a novel
female, in a larger, open area. Among males from four-hole chambers,
about half preferred their familiar mates. Among mates males who mated
more slowly in the one-hole chambers, 80 percent preferred the familiar
partner.



Driving this behavioral dynamic is, as always with rat sex, some
neurochemical reward. Boston University biologist Mary Erskine notes
that "sexual preferences come from chemical rewards, and we can be
sure there some here." Sexual climax, in fact, unleashes a flood of
pleasure-producing hormones and neurotransmitters, such as testosterone
and dopamine. Pfaus speculates that the higher level of arousal created
by the longer wait generates a stronger release, and a more substantial
reward, thereby enforcing the preference.



"Whether it's simply a stronger dose of the usual chemical
rewards or some in addition, we don't know," Pfaus says.
"But something is making this short of mating more rewarding to the
male or rewarding in a different way."





Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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