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  1. Data-Driven Research on the Matching Degree of Eyes, Eyebrows and Face Shapes.Jian Zhao, Meng Zhang, Chen He & Kainan Zuo - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • Red, Yellow, and Super-White Sclera.Robert R. Provine, Marcello O. Cabrera & Jessica Nave-Blodgett - 2013 - Human Nature 24 (2):126-136.
    The sclera, the eye’s tough outer layer, is, among primates, white only in humans, providing the ground necessary for the display of colors that vary in health and disease. The current study evaluates scleral color as a cue of socially significant information about health, attractiveness, and age by contrasting the perception of eyes with normal whites with copies of those eyes whose whites were reddened, yellowed, or further whitened by digital editing. Individuals with red and yellow sclera were rated to (...)
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  • Bodily feelings and aesthetic experience of art.Lauri Nummenmaa & Riitta Hari - 2023 - Cognition and Emotion 37 (3):515-528.
    Humans all around the world are drawn to creating and consuming art due to its capability to evoke emotions, but the mechanisms underlying art-evoked feelings remain poorly characterised. Here we show how embodiement contributes to emotions evoked by a large database of visual art pieces (n = 336). In four experiments, we mapped the subjective feeling space of art-evoked emotions (n = 244), quantified “bodily fingerprints” of these emotions (n = 615), and recorded the subjects’ interest annotations (n = 306) (...)
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  • Attractive faces temporally modulate visual attention.Koyo Nakamura & Hideaki Kawabata - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  • Darwin’s sexual selection hypothesis revisited: Musicality increases sexual attraction in both sexes.Manuela M. Marin & Ines Rathgeber - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:971988.
    A number of theories about the origins of musicality have incorporated biological and social perspectives. Darwin argued that musicality evolved by sexual selection, functioning as a courtship display in reproductive partner choice. Darwin did not regard musicality as a sexually dimorphic trait, paralleling evidence that both sexes produce and enjoy music. A novel research strand examines the effect of musicality on sexual attraction by acknowledging the importance of facial attractiveness. We previously demonstrated that music varying in emotional content increases the (...)
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  • An epigenetic resolution of the lek paradox.Melvin M. Bonilla, Jeanne A. Zeh & David W. Zeh - 2016 - Bioessays 38 (4):355-366.
    Female choice for traits signaling male genetic quality is expected to erode heritable variation in fitness, undermining the benefits of choice. Known as the lek paradox, this contradiction has motivated extensive population genetic theory, yet remains unresolved. Recent modeling by Bonduriansky and Day concludes that costly female preference is best maintained when male condition is determined by environmentally induced factors transmitted across single generations. Here, we reformulate their model in explicitly epigenetic terms, and review evidence that environmentally induced paternal effects (...)
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