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Whatever your love interest...
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Pheromones are natural occurring substances in the fertile body. They are excreted externally, conveying airborne messages that generate responses from others of the same species. Pheromones are crucial to the survival of all animals including humans.
Humans respond to pheromone levels that are too low to smell. A study by Sobel and colleagues (Stanford University) found that a air-borne fragrant pheromone (oestra- 1,3,5(10),16-tetraen-3yl acetate) would activate brain centers even when present at concentrations below a threshold of conscious detection.
Sobel used Magnetic Resonance techniques to prove that exposure to pheromones (at undetectable levels) activate brain centers. Even when the experimental subjects could not smell the chemical, their brain centers that respond to the pheromone, were activated (Sobel et al 1999). Other studies of brain EEG patterns of behavioral evidence have also come to the same conclusion: that we can be strongly affected by pheromones that we are not even conscious of smelling.
The Pheromones given off by males are different than those given off by females. Modern science has been able to create almost identical pheromones to those we create naturally. Allure #9 makes use of these synthetic female pheromones to assist todays modern woman stand out in a crowd and attract her desired mate to her.
Appropriate sexual behavior is beneficial to a women's health, both can exert a positive benefits and regular sexual contact has been proven to;
Allure #9 contains male attractant pheromones developed in a Swiss laboratories and extensively tested on human volunteers.
A study on male attractant Pheromones conducted in 2001 by Norma McCoy of the San Francisco State University using synthetically produced Pheromones established that Pheromones indeed increase the sexual attractiveness of women to men. In this first of its kind study published in the quarterly journal Physiology and Behavior the results showed that of the 36 women tested, 74 percent of those wearing their regular perfume with the pheromone saw an overall increase in three or more of the following socio-sexual behaviors: frequency of kissing, heavy petting and affection, sexual intercourse, sleeping next to their partner, and formal dates with men. In contrast, only 23 percent of the women who had a placebo added to their perfume saw an increase in these socio-sexual behaviors. (See appendice 1)
While many products profess to contain Pheromones very few contain genuine Pheromones at appropriate levels, Allure #9 offers that something extra to attract someone special or perhaps give you that edge in business or sales.
Appendix 1
ABSTRACT
A double-blind, 7 A double-blind, placebo-controlled study of a synthesized putative female pheromone was conducted with regularly menstruating, university women (N = 36, mean age = 27.8). The pheromone formula was derived from earlier work investigating the underarm secretions of fertile, sexually active, heterosexual women.
A vial of either synthesized pheromone or placebo was selected blindly and added to a subject's perfume. Subjects recorded seven socio-sexual behaviors and reported them weekly across three menstrual cycles. Beginning with Day 8 of each cycle, the first cycle contained a 2-week baseline period followed by an experimental period of as many as 3 weeks each from the next two cycles for a maximum of 6 weeks.
The 19 pheromone and 17 placebo subjects did not differ significantly in age, weight, body mass index, dating status or ethnicity nor in reported accuracy, back-filling data, perception of a positive effect or perfume use. Placebo subjects were significantly taller than pheromone subjects. Except for male approaches, subjects did not differ significantly at baseline in average weekly socio-sexual behaviors.
A significantly greater proportion of pheromone users compared with placebo users increased over baseline in frequency of sexual intercourse, sleeping next to a partner, formal dates and petting/affection/kissing but not in frequency of male approaches, informal dates or masturbation. Three or more socio-sexual behaviors increased over baseline for 74% of pheromone users compared with 23% of placebo users.
We conclude that this synthesized pheromone formula acted as a sex attractant pheromone and increased the sexual attractiveness of women to men.