travis
05-12-2003, 08:47 AM
</font><blockquote><font class=\"small\">Quote:</font><hr />
from \"Why the Pilgrims Were Hot and Bothered\" by Leah Garchik in the San Francisco Chronicle, March 17, 1995.
At a meeting of the American Psychosomatic Society in New Orleans early this month, neurologist Alan Hirsch of the Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago presented his findings.
\"Perfumes have been used for centuries to elicit sexual arousal,\" said Hirsch, \"yet no scientific study has ever been conducted to prove their effectiveness. We set out to explore the effects of odors on penile blood flow with the hope that positive results would aid in the treatment of impotence.\"
Subjects wore masks scented with an array of odors. The combinations found to be most effective in increasing penile blood flow were lavender and pumpkin pie, doughnut and black licorice, and pumpkin pie and doughnut. Older men, Hirsch found, were most turned on by vanilla.
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anyone knows this?
from \"Why the Pilgrims Were Hot and Bothered\" by Leah Garchik in the San Francisco Chronicle, March 17, 1995.
At a meeting of the American Psychosomatic Society in New Orleans early this month, neurologist Alan Hirsch of the Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago presented his findings.
\"Perfumes have been used for centuries to elicit sexual arousal,\" said Hirsch, \"yet no scientific study has ever been conducted to prove their effectiveness. We set out to explore the effects of odors on penile blood flow with the hope that positive results would aid in the treatment of impotence.\"
Subjects wore masks scented with an array of odors. The combinations found to be most effective in increasing penile blood flow were lavender and pumpkin pie, doughnut and black licorice, and pumpkin pie and doughnut. Older men, Hirsch found, were most turned on by vanilla.
<hr /></blockquote><font class=\"post\">
anyone knows this?