Is the foreskin really the most sensitive part of your penis? Here’s what new research shows

You may have seen these headlines recently:
“We Finally Know Whether Or Not Being Circumcised Affects Sexual Pleasure”
They’re all reporting on the same study from Queen’s University that
examines differences in sensitivity between circumcised and intact
penises.
But none of those headlines is exactly true.

The scientists looked at four different kinds of sensitivity: fine touch, pain, warmth, and heat pain.
Basically, they used a tiny thread to poke at the guys with
increasing pressure until they could feel it, and then until it hurt.
For the heat-related sensitivities, the researchers touched the subjects
with a rod that heated up until they could detect the warmth, and then
until it burned.
The big question: Is the foreskin more sensitive than the rest of the
penis, which would mean that removing it makes your penis less
sensitive than it could be?
The answer depends on which kind of sensitivity you’re talking about.
The foreskin is significantly more sensitive to fine touch than the other three locations on the penis, the study finds.
For detecting warmth, the foreskin is more sensitive than the head, but not the shaft.
There is no significant difference in pain or heat pain sensitivity between the foreskin and the other parts of the penis.
But the more important question is this: What do these tests have to
do with sexual pleasure? Does being more sensitive to a burn or the
touch of a thread make sex feel more intense?

Scientists don’t know yet, says study author Jennifer Bossio, a Ph.D. candidate in clinical psychology at Queen’s University.
Interestingly, the subjects’ forearms are just as sensitive to fine touch as the foreskins. The forearm is even more sensitive to fine touch than the head and the shaft.
Does that mean we’re having sex all wrong—or that the fine touch test isn’t a great barometer for sexual pleasure?
Probably the latter, says Bossio.
“Some research suggests that the other three of the four tests—pain,
warmth, and heat pain—activate the nerve fibers that are associated with
sexual pleasure,” she says. “But that’s definitely something that we
need to look into more.”
So here’s the more accurate headline: Scientists Still Aren’t Sure How Circumcision Affects Sexual Pleasure.
It might reduce sensitivity in bed. It might not. It might vary from
person to person. In her study, Bossio concludes that any potential
effect is “minimal.”
That’s not to say sex with a foreskin is identical to sex without.
Some uncut men say that the foreskin rolls back and forth over the
head during masturbation and intercourse in a way that feels good.
That’s a sensation circumcised guys will never experience.
Your partner may be able to feel a difference, too.
In the book Sex Made Easy,
Debby Herbenick, Ph.D., writes of her first experience with an uncut
man: “I could feel his foreskin move along my vaginal walls during sex.
It was a new sensation to me and a wonderful one. . . . Feeling his
foreskin also seemed to make it easier to experience orgasm during
vaginal intercourse.”
But a 2013 review in the Journal of Sexual Medicine suggests
that foreskin does not make or break your sex life, concluding that
circumcision doesn’t harm sexual function, sensation, satisfaction, or
pleasure.
For better or for worse, most men are stuck with the decision made by
their parents. Nearly 60 percent of male newborns in the U.S. get
circumcised at birth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
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