Vendaval -> Scent of attraction, female and male phermones (6/13/2007 7:51:27 PM)
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"When a Woman Smells Best" by Sara Goudarzi, Special to Live Science posted: 18 January 2006, 07:52 am, ET The scent of a woman is more attractive at certain times of the month, suggests a new study that had men sniffing women's armpit odor. "We were interested whether armpit odor changes across menstrual cycle," said study author Jan Havlieek of the Department of Anthropology at Charles University, Prague. "To test this, we asked a group of women to wear cotton pads in their armpits for 24 hours." The women didn't wear perfumes, use deodorants, eat spicy or smelly foods, smoke, drink alcohol or use hormonal contraceptives such as the pill. Body odor was collected during three phases: menstrual (at the beginning); follicular (between the first day of menstruation and the onset of ovulation); and luteal (the fertile stage). "The fresh pads were subsequently rated for their attractiveness and intensity by a group of 42 men," Havlieek told LiveScience. The most attractive smells, men said, were from the time between the first day of menstruation and ovulation. " http://www.livescience.com/health/060118_armpit_odor.html >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "The Sexy, Healthy Scent of a Man" By Robert Roy Britte, Live Science Senior Writer posted: 04 November 2004, 02:06 pm ET "Stinky T-shirts" " In 1996, Claus Wedekind, a zoologist at Bern University in Switzerland, conducted what's become known as the stinky T-shirt study. Wedekind had 44 men each wear a t-shirt for two nights straight, then tested how women reacted to the smelly shirts. Like mice, women preferred the scent of men whose immune systems were unlike their own. If a man's immune system was similar, a woman tended to describe his T-shirt as smelling like her father or brother. Since then, companies have developed pheremone-based perfumes and cologns, with promises of increased sexual attraction. Researchers don't agree on their effectiveness. More research is needed to figure out how and to what extent a woman's nose leads her to sex, and how adept she is at picking a healthy partner. "We cannot rule out that other parts of the human nose are able to detect the peptides," Frank Zufall said. "We can now ask whether these peptides are present in human secretions such as sweat and saliva, whether they can be detected by the human nose, and if so, whether they have any influence on our own social behavior." " http://www.livescience.com/health/041104_sex_and_smell.html
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