One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy
One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy
One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy
One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy
One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy.
One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy
One in a series of interviews about masturbation and self pleasure, the questions are asked by a young couple and sometimes their female friend. The questions are candid and the answers are truthful and very sexy.
The foetus moves its mouth in an exaggerated manner when it hears a human voice. This occurs from the 16th week of pregnancy (with a foetus of 11cm) and only when the voice reaches it through an intravaginal device developed for this purpose. This is one of the conclusions of the study presented by Dr. Álex García-Faura, the Scientific Director of the Institut Marquès, at the 25th European Congress of Perinatal Medicine held in Maastricht (Netherlands).
The study finds that babies hear practically no external noise and only react when sound reaches them through the vagina, which confirms that they hardly hear voices through the mother’s abdomen. Their reactions were studied using Babypod®, a small device that is inserted into the vagina like a tampon and is connected to a mobile phone, enabling the voice of the mother or anyone else to reach the foetus.
To view the multimedia release go to:
http://www.multivu.com/players/uk/7859951-institut-marques-babies-react-mother-voice/
After only 16 weeks of existence, foetuses hear and respond to music as long as it is emitted from their mother’s vagina. Foetuses respond to this stimulus by opening their mouths and pulling their tongues out as far as possible, making vocalisation movements – prior to the acquisition of language.
This is the main conclusion of the study conducted by the team of Institut Marquès, which boasts the collaboration of Alberto Prats, Professor of Anatomy and Human Embryology of the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Barcelona.
The study, entitled “Foetal facial expression in response to intravaginal music emission”, is published this week in the journal Ultrasound of the British Medical Ultrasound Society (BMUS).
According to Dr. Marisa López-Teijón, the Head of Assisted Reproduction at Institut Marquès and the principal researcher and author of the clinical study: “We have discovered that the formula for foetuses to hear like us is to emit music from the mother’s vagina. They barely hear the sound that reaches them through their mother’s abdomen: the soft tissues of the abdomen and the inside of the mother’s body absorb the soundwaves”.
To view the multimedia release go to:
http://www.multivu.com/players/English/7647351-how-foetuses-hear-musical-stimuli/