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			 Artist Tega Brain, who teaches at New York's School for Poetic 
			Computation, and Sam Lavigne, an editor and researcher at New York 
			University, created Smell Dating, which they describe as an art 
			project. 
 Each of its first 100 clients received a T-shirt to wear for three 
			days straight without bathing. The clients then mailed the T-shirts 
			back to Brain and Lavigne's "Sweat Shop" at NYU, where they were cut 
			into swatches. Smell Dating then sent batches of 10 mixed swatches 
			back to the clients to sniff this week.
 
 A match will be made if one client likes the scent of another and 
			the olfactory attraction is mutual. In other words, if "Client 55" 
			likes "Client 69" and vice versa, put a heart around it, Brain said.
 
 The idea is based on the science of pheromones, the chemical signals 
			that creatures from gerbils to giraffes send out to entice mates.
 
 
			
			 
			Clients, who pay a one-time fee of $25, dive in nose-first, unaware 
			of a potential smell-mate's age, gender or sexual orientation.
 
 "Most normal dating services, you rely on profile pictures, 
			assumptions that come from visual information," Brain said. "You 
			either really like the smell of someone or you don't. It's much more 
			innate."
 
 On Wednesday, 25-year-old NYU graduate student Jesse Donaldson 
			excitedly opened the package of white swatches in individually 
			numbered plastic bags that had arrived at his apartment in Brooklyn.
 
 He said he hoped Smell Dating could help where other popular 
			matchmaking services had failed.
 
 "I'm like so many other people in New York City, using Tinder, using 
			OK Cupid," Donaldson said, "and my main issue with these things is 
			you feel like you're shopping for somebody as opposed to making a 
			genuine connection with another human being."
 
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			Brain said she and Lavigne consulted "a lot of smell researchers" 
			about their art project, which explores whether a person's body odor 
			can trigger Cupid's arrow.
 "We wanted to see if people would be interested in meeting other 
			people just based on this one bit of information rather than this 
			avalanche of information that you usually get," said Lavigne as he 
			watched volunteers wearing hooded white jumpsuits and blue rubber 
			gloves cut up the worn T-shirts at the Sweat Shop.
 
 "Whoa! This one is ready to go!" said a worker, wincing as he 
			sniffed a swatch before putting it into a plastic bag marked #34.
 
 In Brooklyn, Donaldson tore into the first plastic bag, removed the 
			swatch and sniffed. "Fresh-done laundry," he said.
 
 He opened another and inhaled. "Oh. That is nutty. I'm just going to 
			seal that back up."
 
 Then he brought yet another swatch to his nostrils, nodded and said, 
			"Oh." He savored a second whiff and added, "That's my match."
 
 (Reporting by Barbara Goldberg and Angela Moore; Editing by Daniel 
			Wallis and Lisa Von Ahn)
 
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