A mystery chemical isolated
from the sweat of young women seems to act as a romance
booster for their older counterparts.
When the researchers
added the compound, Pheromone 10:13, to a perfume and
gave it to older women, it made their partners more
affectionate.
"In diaries kept by the
women for 6 weeks, 41 percent of pheromone users reported
more petting, kissing and affection with partners,"
New Scientist magazine said.
Pheromones are airborne
chemicals secreted from the body and recognized by their
smell. Humans and animals emit pheromones.
Joan Friebely of Harvard
University and Susan Rako, a doctor from Newton, Massachusetts,
studied the behavior of 44 post-menopausal women. Half
were given a perfume with the compound while the remainder
used a fragrance with a placebo or dummy chemical.
Only 14 percent of women
using the perfume with the placebo reported an increase
in affection from their partners.
Biologist Winnifred Cutler,
the discoverer of the mystery pheromone, is keeping
the identify of the compound a secret until patents
have been granted to her organization, the Athena Institute
for Women's Wellness Research in Chester Springs, Pennsylvania,
according to the magazine.