Saturday, October 14, 2017

Funny Animal as a lover or parental care.

Monday, October 9, 2017

Paypal-How To Sign Up From Bangladesh

Friday, October 30, 2015

World University Ranking 2013-2014

                      World University Ranking






  • Overall score
    94.9
  • Teaching
    94.4                                          
  • International outlook
    65.8
  • Industry income
    91.2
  • Research
    98.2
  • Citations
    99.8


 

The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) is a highly focused science and engineering research and education institution located in Pasadena, CA. It is home to approximately 2,300 students and 300 faculty, and boasts 31 Nobel laureates among its past and current faculty and alumni. Caltech manages the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) for NASA, and owns and operates a global network of astronomical observatories and research facilities.







University of Oxford # Rank-2




  • Overall score
    93.9
  • Teaching
    89.0
  • International outlook
    90.2
  • Industry income
    90.3
  • Research
    98.5
  • Citations
    95.4
     
    Twenty-six British prime ministers, at least 30 other world leaders, 12 saints and 20 archbishops of Canterbury have been Oxonians. Oxford virtually invented college life in the 13th century. The world's third-oldest surviving university offers approximately 12,000 undergraduates a choice of 38 colleges and six permanent private-residence halls. 
     

 

Harvard University # Rank-2 (same point)




  • Overall score
    93.9
  • Teaching
    95.3
  • International outlook
    66.2
  • Industry income
    40.6
  • Research
    98.5
  • Citations
    99.1
     
     
The oldest academic institute in the US, it dates from 1636 and is named after its first benefactor, John Harvard. It has the global academy's largest financial endowment and boasts more than 40 Nobel laureates. Its 210-acre main campus and 23 satellites house 10 faculties and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.

Stanford University # Rank-4




  • Overall score
    93.8
  • Teaching
    94.7
  • International outlook
    68.0
  • Industry income
    61.3
  • Research
    96.8
  • Citations
    99.1
     
 Founded in 1891 by railway tycoon Leland Stanford in remembrance of his son, who died aged 16, Stanford is said to be, after Harvard, the US' most selective university, accepting around 7 per cent of applicants. Its alumni founded corporate giants including Hewlett-Packard and Google. The world's third-richest university, it teaches about 7,000 undergraduate and around 4,000 graduate students.


Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) # Rank-5




  • Overall score
    93.0
  • Teaching
    92.9
  • International outlook
    82.0
  • Industry income
    94.3
  • Research
    89.0
  • Citations
    100.0
     
    In 150 years, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has produced more than 70 Nobel laureates, eight of whom are members of its current faculty. From its 168-acre Charles River campus, more than 10,000 students are instructed in architecture and planning; engineering; humanities, arts and social sciences; management; science; and health sciences and technology.
      

    Princeton University # RAnk-6

    • Overall score
      92.7
    • Teaching
      89.9
    • International outlook
      59.6
    • Industry income
      80.5
    • Research
      97.6
    • Citations
               99.7

     At the heart of American academic life since its charter in 1746, Princeton is one of the smallest of the private Ivy Leaguers, but can boast more than 30 Nobel laureates among its past faculty and alumni. Its 500-acre campus accommodates around 5,000 undergraduates and 2,500 postgraduates overseen by more than 1,100 academics.
     

University of Cambridge # Rank-7




  • Overall score
    92.3
  • Teaching
    90.6
  • International outlook
    86.7
  • Industry income
    52.8
  • Research
    95.3
  • Citations
    95.7
     
    Cambridge alumni loom large in the making of the modern world: Newton on laws and motion; Rutherford splitting the atom; Darwin on evolution; Turing's prototypical computer; Crick and Watson with DNA. Founded in 1209 by Oxford scholars who quit after a dispute with the local citizenry, Cambridge now employs more than 8,500 staff and has over 18,300 students. 

    University of California # Rank-8 




    • Overall score
      89.8
    • Teaching
      83.2
    • International outlook
      57.3
    • Industry income
      59.5
    • Research
      97.5
    • Citations
      99.3
       

    Vitamin E was identified here, a lost Scarlatti opera found, the flu virus identified and America's first no-fault divorce law drafted. A gold-rush by-product, the university by San Francisco Bay was chartered in 1868. To date, more than 20 faculty members have become Nobel laureates. Today's student body consists of about 36,000 members, more than 10,000 of them postgraduates.

     




Tuesday, August 19, 2014

What is Orgasm?

 Orgasm

Definitions:

 In a clinical context, orgasm is usually defined strictly by the muscular contractions involved during sexual activity, along with the characteristic patterns of change in heart rate, blood pressure, and often respiration rate and depth. This is categorized as the sudden discharge of accumulated sexual tension during the sexual response cycle, resulting in rhythmic muscular contractions in the pelvic region.

 
xclusiveearn.blogspot.com

Achieving orgasm:

Orgasms can be achieved by a variety of activities. In men, sufficient sexual stimulation of the penis can be achieved during vaginal or anal intercourse, oral sex (fellatio), non-penetrative sex or masturbation. In women, sufficient sexual stimulation can be achieved during vaginal intercourse, oral sex (cunnilingus), non-penetrative sex or masturbation. Orgasm may also be achieved by the use of a sex toy, such as a sensual vibrator or an erotic electrostimulation. It can additionally be achieved by stimulation of the nipples, uterus, or other erogenous zones, though this is rarer.
In addition to physical stimulation, orgasm can be achieved from psychological arousal alone, such as during dreaming (nocturnal emission for males or females) or by orgasm control. Orgasm by psychological stimulation alone was first reported among people who had spinal cord injury (SCI). Although SCI very often leads to loss of certain sensations and altered self-perception, a person with this disturbance is not deprived of sexual feelings such as sexual arousal and erotic desires.
A person may experience multiple orgasms, or an involuntary orgasm such as in the case of forced sexual contact (during rape or sexual assault). An involuntary orgasm from forced sexual contact often results in feelings of shame caused by internalization of victim-blaming attitudes. The incidence of those who experience unsolicited sexual contact and experience orgasm is very low, though possibly under-reported due to shame or embarrassment; such orgasms additionally happen regardless of gender.

In males


General variabilities

In men, the most common way of achieving orgasm is by physical sexual stimulation of the penis. This is usually accompanied by ejaculation, but it is possible, though also rare, for men to orgasm without ejaculation (known as a "dry orgasm") or to ejaculate without reaching orgasm (which may be a case of delayed ejaculation, a nocturnal emission or a case of anorgasmic ejaculation).Men may also achieve orgasm by stimulation of the prostate (see below).

Two-stage model

The traditional view of male orgasm is that there are two stages: emission following orgasm, almost instantly followed by a refractory period. In 1966, Masters and Johnson published pivotal research about the phases of sexual stimulation. Their work included women and men, and, unlike Alfred Kinsey in 1948 and 1953, tried to determine the physiological stages before and after orgasm.

In females


General orgasmic factors and variabilities

In women, the most common way to achieve orgasm is by physical sexual stimulation of the clitoris; general statistics indicate that 70–80 percent of women require direct clitoral stimulation (consistent manual, oral or other concentrated friction against the external parts of the clitoris) to achieve orgasm, though indirect clitoral stimulation (for example, via vaginal penetration) may also be sufficient.The Mayo Clinic stated, "Orgasms vary in intensity, and women vary in the frequency of their orgasms and the amount of stimulation necessary to trigger an orgasm." Clitoral orgasms are easier to achieve because the glans of the clitoris, or clitoris as a whole, has more than 8,000 sensory nerve endings, which is as many (or more in some cases) nerve endings present in the human penis or glans penis. As the clitoris is homologous to the penisit is the equivalent in its capacity to receive sexual stimulation.