What is a skin orgasm?

Posted by | November 9, 2016 06:43 | Filed under: Planet


Yes, there is such a thing.

Have you ever been listening to a great piece of music and felt a chill run up your spine? Or goosebumps tickle your arms and shoulders?

The experience is called frisson (pronounced free-sawn), a French term meaning “aesthetic chills,” and it feels like waves of pleasure running all over your skin…

While scientists are still unlocking the secrets of this phenomenon, a large body of research over the past five decades has traced the origins of frisson to how we emotionally react to unexpected stimuli in our environment, particularly music.

Musical passages that include unexpected harmonies, sudden changes in volume or the moving entrance of a soloist are particularly common triggers for frisson because they violate listeners’ expectations in a positive way, similar to what occurred during the 2009 debut performance of the unassuming Susan Boyle on “Britain’s Got Talent.”

If a violin soloist is playing a particularly moving passage that builds up to a beautiful high note, the listener might find this climactic moment emotionally charged, and feel a thrill from witnessing the successful execution of such a difficult piece.

But science is still trying to catch up with why this thrill results in goosebumps in the first place.

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Copyright 2016 Liberaland
By: Alan

Alan Colmes is the publisher of Liberaland.

One response to What is a skin orgasm?

  1. Gary Parillo November 10th, 2016 at 01:05

    Happens to me every time I listen to certain bands from my teen years in the 1960s.Seems to me it may be triggered by emotional response just as much as musicale tones.

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