According to a study conducted in 1985, approximately 70% of adult humans have a vomeronasal organ (VNO), although traditionalists have held that this is vesitgal.
More recent findings have discovered that humans have a genome which closely resembles the pheremone receptors of mice.
These studies are not new, and in fact the VNO is also known as Jacobson's Organ, for its discover Ludvig Jacobson, who described its presence in 1813.
According to a study conducted in 1985, approximately 70% of adult humans have a vomeronasal organ (VNO), although traditionalists have held that this is vesitgal.
More recent findings have discovered that humans have a genome which closely resembles the pheremone receptors of mice.
These studies are not new, and in fact the VNO is also known as Jacobson's Organ, for its discover Ludvig Jacobson, who described its presence in 1813.