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79 results on '"Lisa M. DeBruine"'

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1. Sexual orientation predicts men’s preferences for sexually dimorphic face-shape characteristics: A replication study

2. No evidence that partnered and unpartnered gay men differ in their preferences for male facial masculinity

3. Comparing theory-driven and data-driven attractiveness models using images of real women's faces

4. Context-specific effects of facial dominance and trustworthiness on hypothetical leadership decisions

5. Facial masculinity is only weakly correlated with handgrip strength in young adult women

6. No evidence that women using oral contraceptives have weaker preferences for masculine characteristics in men's faces

7. No compelling evidence that more physically attractive young adult women have higher estradiol or progesterone

8. Facial coloration tracks changes in women's estradiol

9. Sex-Specificity in the Reward Value of Facial Attractiveness

10. Predicting the reward value of faces and bodies from social perception

11. Observer age and the social transmission of attractiveness in humans: Younger women are more influenced by the choices of popular others than older women

12. Integrating Shape Cues of Adiposity and Color Information When Judging Facial Health and Attractiveness

13. Men’s, but not Women’s, Sociosexual Orientation Predicts Couples’ Perceptions of Sexually Dimorphic Cues in Own-Sex Faces

14. Do assortative preferences contribute to assortative mating for adiposity?

15. The motivational salience of faces is related to both their valence and dominance

16. Are physiological and behavioral immune responses negatively correlated? Evidence from hormone-linked differences in men's face preferences

17. Are Men’s Perceptions of Sexually Dimorphic Vocal Characteristics Related to Their Testosterone Levels?

18. Sexual Selection on Human Faces and Voices

19. Effects of Partner Beauty on Opposite-Sex Attractiveness Judgments

20. Sociosexuality Predicts Women’s Preferences for Symmetry in Men’s Faces

21. The many faces of research on face perception

22. Social learning and human mate preferences: a potential mechanism for generating and maintaining between-population diversity in attraction

23. Category-contingent face adaptation for novel colour categories: Contingent effects are seen only after social or meaningful labelling

24. Form-Specific Repetition Priming for Unfamiliar Faces

25. No evidence that facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) is associated with women's sexual desire

26. Sex-Dimorphic Face Shape Preference in Heterosexual and Homosexual Men and Women

27. Integrating Gaze Direction and Sexual Dimorphism of Face Shape When Perceiving the Dominance of Others

28. View-Contingent Aftereffects Suggest Joint Coding of Face Shape and View

29. Men report stronger attraction to femininity in women's faces when their testosterone levels are high

30. Category contingent aftereffects for faces of different races, ages and species

31. Social Perception of Facial Resemblance in Humans

32. Testing the Utility of a Data-Driven Approach for Assessing BMI from Face Images

33. Women's facial attractiveness is related to their body mass index but not their salivary cortisol

34. Reported maternal tendencies predict the reward value of infant facial cuteness, but not cuteness detection

35. The reward value of infant facial cuteness tracks within-subject changes in women's salivary testosterone

36. Commitment to relationships and preferences for femininity and apparent health in faces are strongest on days of the menstrual cycle when progesterone level is high

37. Trustworthy but not lust-worthy: context-specific effects of facial resemblance

38. Women's attractiveness judgments of self-resembling faces change across the menstrual cycle

39. Facial resemblance increases the attractiveness of same–sex faces more than other–sex faces

40. Impressions of dominance are made relative to others in the visual environment

41. The Relative Contributions of Facial Shape and Surface Information to Perceptions of Attractiveness and Dominance

42. Changes in salivary estradiol predict changes in women's preferences for vocal masculinity

43. Women's hormone levels modulate the motivational salience of facial attractiveness and sexual dimorphism

44. Reading the Look of Love

45. Circum-menopausal effects on women's judgements of facial attractiveness

46. Adaptation to faces and voices: unimodal, cross-modal, and sex-specific effects

47. Cross-cultural variation in women's preferences for cues to sex- and stress-hormones in the male face

48. Perceived facial adiposity conveys information about women's health

49. Facial cues to perceived height influence leadership choices in simulated war and peace contexts

50. Salivary cortisol and pathogen disgust predict men's preferences for feminine shape cues in women's faces

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