Sex-chip for Woman for Pleasure

British scientists are developing a "pleasure-chip" that, once implanted in the brains, the pleasure in sex may significantly increase. With the chip get people with low libido fun again in reproduction, researchers predict the UK University of Oxford. The chip sends small electrical shock to certain parts of the brains. In America, the chip is already used to the effects of Parkinson's disease to fight.

Active sex life

But British researchers focus on the part of the brains - just behind the eyes - that 'pleasure feelings "to activate eg food and sex. Tipu Aziz, Professor of Neurosurgery in Oxford, confirms the British newspaper The Telegraph that there is evidence that the chip works. But he also stressed that the technology is still far from perfect. "A few years ago planted a chip in the surgeon in a woman with low libido. Then she got a very active sex life. She found this change too significant and had the chip removed. "

Still Painful

Moreover, the technique is still "rough and painful": an operation via a wire of a pacemaker to bring the brains to be placed. This can cause painful bleeding. Yet he sees the future in stimulating chip. "As technology improves, we can deep brain stimulation in many other application areas. The use will be subtle, and you can chip on and off whenever you want.