Not an expert at all, but from what
I have gathered, we have yet to determine just what serves as a pheromone "receptor" in humans. There is still quite
a bit of debate over weather humans even have a "true" VNO or similar, where it is, or even if we have a VNO, if
it's even active. Our pheromone receptors could be separate, or even somehow tied in with our "regular" sense of
smell receptors. Still not "proven."
Step 1 therefor is to ID the way humans percieve or "translate"
pheromone molecules.
Step 2 would be building an "artificial" receptor, much like today's artificial noses
(which are still relatively crude).
Combined with Step 2, Step 3 would be to design some sort of pheromone
"transmitter/emitter" to install in the surrogate.
All in all probably a silly undertaking. Maybe it would be
best just to build a electronic transmitter that broadcast a code that would be picked up by the other surrogate's
receiver that encoded the owner's phero sig. Of course we would also have to have decoded and quantified that
signature as well... (also based on the assumption you used your "real" signature and not just made up an "ideal"
[as far as you were concerned] "enhanced" [ie fake] one).
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