50
Mixed
unknown
A study found that eating garlic made men's body odor more pleasant, and researchers collected sweat samples for others to rate the smell.
The claim regarding garlic making men's body odor more pleasant lacks substantiated support from the evidence found. Web evidence discusses garlic's impact on breath and body odor but does not confirm an improvement in odor attractiveness or pleasantness. Therefore, the claim lacks sufficient corroboration. The evidence does not directly address the specifics of the attractiveness and pleasantness related to body odor, indicating that more targeted information and studies would be required to confirm such a claim. The other claim about researchers collecting sweat samples is straightforward, based on common research methods, and does not require verification.
Individual Claims
50
Mixed
Health
Eating garlic made men's body odor smell more pleasant, more attractive, and less intense.
Web evidence discusses garlic's impact on body odor but does not confirm that it makes the odor more pleasant or attractive. Current evidence does not include direct scientific studies supporting the claim. No external evidence found to verify or refute this specific effect on odor attractiveness and pleasantness.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
50
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
50
Evidence Summary
No direct scientific studies found on garlic's effect on body odor attractiveness.
50
Mixed
Research
Researchers collected sweat samples to rate the smell.
The method is typical of research studies analyzing body odor, and the claim does not raise significant controversial issues.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
0
Source Quality Score
None
Source Quality Weight
0
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
100
Weighted Total
50
Evidence Summary
None