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Foreign literature

According to the cosmetics industry, cosmetics play a huge role in and are an essential part of what many women
consider important about their outward appearance. Many women feel inadequate in terms of their self-esteem
and self-confidence, which can affect their evaluation of personal beauty (Scott, 2007). Cosmetics products, such
as mascara, blush, foundation, and eye shadow, are quick to apply, impermanent, and may improve one’s
appearance in accordance with societal or personal beauty ideals, thus improving self-confidence (Miller & Cox,
1982). Some women may also use cosmetics for hedonic enjoyment or aesthetic enhancement, not necessarily to
bolster self-confidence. All of these motivations for use of cosmetics may result in expression of self-identity.

According to Lerner, Karabenick, and Stuart (1973), what a woman observes in the mirror is what she uses to
measure her worth as a human being. Furthermore, some women can be their own worst critics as they look in the
mirror; some women often tend to “over-think” their appearance and are often not accurate in assessments of
their own appearances (Lerner et al., 1973). Previous research conducted on self-esteem has been related to how
women feel about their size, shape, and body (Trampe, Stapel, & Siero, 2007). Trampe et al. (2007) summarized
across six studies and found that participants with body dissatisfaction were more affected by mass media images
than women who were satisfied with their body image. Women who were unhappy with their body image were
more prone to social comparison, affected by both attractive models and real women.

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they help and guide the researcher in locating more sources of related information

thery help the researcher in making vhis researcher design

they help and guide the researcher in making comparison between his findings with the finding of the others
researcher on similar studies with the end in the view of the formulating generalization and principles which are
the contribution of the study to the fund of knowledge

local studies

According to cosmetic chemist Randy Schueller's website, The Beauty Brains (which he runs with fellow
cosmetic chemist Perry Romanowski), there's legitimate evidence that honey's antibacterial properties
fight bacteria (as you'd expect an antibacterial to do), but raw honey does not ward off P. acnes, the
specific bacteria that causes acne. "One study in the Journal of Antibacterial Chemotherapy showed that
honey (in concentrations between 2.5 percent and 5 percent) is effective against staphylococci, a very
harmful bacteria," writes Schueller. "We could not find any studies that tested honey’s effect on P. acnes,
the bacteria that helps cause zits. However, given what we know about the antibacterial mechanism of
honey, it is plausible it would work on this bacterium as well." So while there isn't hard evidence, in theory
it has a similar biomechanism.

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