View Full Version : Study Against None
The famous study in which
women only responded neutrally or slightly favorably to none when they were ovulating - If my understanding is
correct, they were just commenting on the scent (?). During the rest of their cycle, they judged the scent
unfavorably.
Whether they conciously like the scent or not has nothing to do with how they subconsciously
react to it. I\'ve read a post from perhaps Irish??? that None is shown to light the sexual area of the brain.
Sorry if it wasn\'t you Irish, but it was someone who is pretty reliable.
If that is true, I think that is
all the proof one needs in backing None as an attractant, as long as it is coupled with something that sends out a
stability or comforting signal (A1, Wagg, Nol).
DrSmellThis
02-08-2004, 12:51 PM
It wasn\'t
that they were responding to the scent, but that the dosage was neither controlled, nor applied to an actual person
in those studies, if I remember correctly. So that evidence was inconclusive.
Irish
02-09-2004, 09:06 AM
The study you refer
to about noticeable brain effects had to do with A1, not none.
The none study that tested women\'s opinion of
the smell of none tested it at high concentrations directly under their noses - this situation would not occur in
normal human interaction. I would also like to know more about potential subconscious effects of none, but I
haven\'t found much. There is an unpublished work suggesting hormonal effects, but that study is very shaky. All
the action these days seems to be focused on A1 since it gives such dramatic effects under brain scan.
</font><blockquote><font class=\"small\">Quote:</font><hr />
The study you refer to about noticeable brain
effects had to do with A1, not none.
The none study that tested women\'s opinion of the smell of none tested it
at high concentrations directly under their noses - this situation would not occur in normal human interaction. I
would also like to know more about potential subconscious effects of none, but I haven\'t found much. There is an
unpublished work suggesting hormonal effects, but that study is very shaky. All the action these days seems to be
focused on A1 since it gives such dramatic effects under brain scan.
<hr /></blockquote><font
class=\"post\">
A) What is the holdup in Erox creating a PMS product? The stand to make a ton of money.
B)
Just because the scent of none is bad to women has no bearing on the potential physiological reactions it evokes.
Given the fact that many who can\'t smell it at all witness changes in their own mood from none, I think it is
safe to say that some type of physological reaction is occuring.
Thanks Irish
DrSmellThis
02-09-2004, 02:44 PM
Perfumers know
well that many of the things that smell best to people smell the worst at high concentrations! (e.g., civet) So the
fact that concentrated -none smells badly is not negative.
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