1. Media Reports
"Pheromones: Potential mates in your sex life" (CNN, June 25, 1999)...If you're looking for the man or woman of your dreams, unsuspecting pheromones in your body scent are most likely playing a large and very clever role in mate attraction... 74% of the people who tested a pheromone, experienced an increase in hugging, kissing and sexual intercourse.
"Sexual Magnetism" (Urban Magazine, Winter 2001)...What really drives women wild are naturally occurring body chemicals called pheromones. ...Users of pheromone products report that people generally pay more attention to them, listen more when they speak, and are friendlier in social situations.
WSVN TV in Miami on March 3, 1998
We've got a potion for passion...a secret weapon to attract the opposite sex ...undetectable chemicals, pheromones.
2. Experiments
The study -- conducted for 14 weeks in 2000 -- recruited 36 women between the ages of 19 and 48 years old through on-campus psychology and human sexuality classes. The criteria called for women who were heterosexual, regularly menstruating, neither married to nor living with a man, not currently using an oral contraceptive and in good health.
In the study, 36 women wore their own, regular perfume with the pheromones. Of the 36 women tested, 74% saw an overall increase in three or more of the following sociosexual behaviors: frequency of kissing, heavy petting and affection, sexual intercourse, sleeping next to their partner, and formal dates with men.
"This is a biological signal to a man that suggests that this woman can reproduce and he responds with romantic behavior related to securing intimate relations with her," said research author Norma McCoy, a psychology professor at SFSU. "This is not a smell one can detect. Neither the man not the woman is aware of it, but it's very powerful. This chemical appears to influence a man's desire to have sexual intercourse."
* Source: "That old pheromone magic" (The Examiner, March 20, 2002)
This study tested whether synthesized human male pheromones increase the sociosexual behavior of men. Thirty-eight heterosexual men, ages 26-42, completed a 2-week baseline period and 6-week placebocontrolled, double-blind trial testing a pheromone "designed to improve the romance in their lives." Each subject kept daily behavioral records for 6 sociosexual behaviors: petting/affection/kissing, formal dates, informal dates, sleeping next to a romantic partner, sexual intercourse, and self-stimulation to ejaculation and FAXed them each week. Significantly pheromone users increased above baseline in sexual intercourse and sleeping with a romantic partner. There was a tendency for pheromone users to increase above baseline in petting/affection/kissing, and informal dates, but not in self-stimulation to ejaculation or in formal dates. A significantly larger proportion of pheromone users than placebo significantly increased in sociosexual behaviors involving a female partner.
Thus, there was a significant increase in male sociosexual behaviors in which a woman's sexual interest and cooperation plays a role. These initial data show that human male pheromones affected the sexual attractiveness of men to women.
* Source: "Pheromonal influences on sociosexual behavior in men" (Arch Sex Behav, 27(1):1-13 1998 Feb)
"Pheromones: Potential mates in your sex life" (CNN, June 25, 1999)...If you're looking for the man or woman of your dreams, unsuspecting pheromones in your body scent are most likely playing a large and very clever role in mate attraction... 74% of the people who tested a pheromone, experienced an increase in hugging, kissing and sexual intercourse.
"Sexual Magnetism" (Urban Magazine, Winter 2001)...What really drives women wild are naturally occurring body chemicals called pheromones. ...Users of pheromone products report that people generally pay more attention to them, listen more when they speak, and are friendlier in social situations.
WSVN TV in Miami on March 3, 1998
We've got a potion for passion...a secret weapon to attract the opposite sex ...undetectable chemicals, pheromones.
2. Experiments
The study -- conducted for 14 weeks in 2000 -- recruited 36 women between the ages of 19 and 48 years old through on-campus psychology and human sexuality classes. The criteria called for women who were heterosexual, regularly menstruating, neither married to nor living with a man, not currently using an oral contraceptive and in good health.
In the study, 36 women wore their own, regular perfume with the pheromones. Of the 36 women tested, 74% saw an overall increase in three or more of the following sociosexual behaviors: frequency of kissing, heavy petting and affection, sexual intercourse, sleeping next to their partner, and formal dates with men.
"This is a biological signal to a man that suggests that this woman can reproduce and he responds with romantic behavior related to securing intimate relations with her," said research author Norma McCoy, a psychology professor at SFSU. "This is not a smell one can detect. Neither the man not the woman is aware of it, but it's very powerful. This chemical appears to influence a man's desire to have sexual intercourse."
* Source: "That old pheromone magic" (The Examiner, March 20, 2002)
This study tested whether synthesized human male pheromones increase the sociosexual behavior of men. Thirty-eight heterosexual men, ages 26-42, completed a 2-week baseline period and 6-week placebocontrolled, double-blind trial testing a pheromone "designed to improve the romance in their lives." Each subject kept daily behavioral records for 6 sociosexual behaviors: petting/affection/kissing, formal dates, informal dates, sleeping next to a romantic partner, sexual intercourse, and self-stimulation to ejaculation and FAXed them each week. Significantly pheromone users increased above baseline in sexual intercourse and sleeping with a romantic partner. There was a tendency for pheromone users to increase above baseline in petting/affection/kissing, and informal dates, but not in self-stimulation to ejaculation or in formal dates. A significantly larger proportion of pheromone users than placebo significantly increased in sociosexual behaviors involving a female partner.
Thus, there was a significant increase in male sociosexual behaviors in which a woman's sexual interest and cooperation plays a role. These initial data show that human male pheromones affected the sexual attractiveness of men to women.
* Source: "Pheromonal influences on sociosexual behavior in men" (Arch Sex Behav, 27(1):1-13 1998 Feb)
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