Women are more likely to wear red or pink at peak fertility

scientific article

Women are more likely to wear red or pink at peak fertility is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1177/0956797613476045
P698PubMed publication ID23842955

P2093author name stringAlec T Beall
Jessica L Tracy
P2860cites workFemale facial attractiveness increases during the fertile phase of the menstrual cycleQ24683643
Timing of sexual intercourse in relation to ovulation. Effects on the probability of conception, survival of the pregnancy, and sex of the babyQ28283876
Vocal cues of ovulation in human females.Q28755052
Amazon's Mechanical Turk: A New Source of Inexpensive, Yet High-Quality, Data?Q30979637
Ovulation as a male mating prime: Subtle signs of women's fertility influence men's mating cognition and behaviorQ34136475
Women's attractiveness changes with estradiol and progesterone across the ovulatory cycleQ34312291
Disco clothing, female sexual motivation, and relationship status: is she dressed to impress?Q34329019
Conditional expression of women's desires and men's mate guarding across the ovulatory cycleQ34483027
Ovulatory shifts in human female ornamentation: near ovulation, women dress to impressQ34574448
Changes in women's choice of dress across the ovulatory cycle: naturalistic and laboratory task-based evidenceQ34811455
Variations in the reporting of menstrual historiesQ41474508
Sexual swellings advertise female quality in wild baboonsQ47635297
Romantic red: red enhances men's attraction to womenQ48318660
Colour vision as an adaptation to frugivory in primates.Q55066516
Female preference for male faces changes cyclicallyQ55980360
The evolution of mating preferences and the paradox of the lekQ56020653
Are You Selling the Right Colour? A Cross‐cultural Review of Colour as a Marketing CueQ57535742
P433issue9
P304page(s)1837-1841
P577publication date2013-07-10
P1433published inPsychological ScienceQ7256367
P1476titleWomen are more likely to wear red or pink at peak fertility
P478volume24

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q35680826Changes in Women's Facial Skin Color over the Ovulatory Cycle are Not Detectable by the Human Visual System
Q39323546Human colour in mate choice and competition
Q47560168Interactions between observer and stimuli fertility status: Endocrine and perceptual responses to intrasexual vocal fertility cues
Q47216257Is preference for ovulatory female's faces associated with men's testosterone levels?
Q30488112Lady in Red: Hormonal Predictors of Women's Clothing Choices
Q50183008No compelling positive association between ovarian hormones and wearing red clothing when using multinomial analyses
Q35132696On delusion formation
Q50453199Red and romantic rivalry: viewing another woman in red increases perceptions of sexual receptivity, derogation, and intentions to mate-guard
Q56518898Revisiting the Red Effect on Attractiveness and Sexual Receptivity
Q35951376Strategic Sexual Signals: Women's Display versus Avoidance of the Color Red Depends on the Attractiveness of an Anticipated Interaction Partner
Q35234821Teaching science writing in an introductory lab course
Q33977666The color red distorts time perception for men, but not for women
Q35106355The impact of weather on women's tendency to wear red or pink when at high risk for conception
Q38869900Theoretical frameworks for human behavioral endocrinology
Q92253326Visual cues to fertility are in the eye (movements) of the beholder
Q53131107Women's Fertility Status Alters Other Women's Jealousy and Mate Guarding.
Q30488500Women's Preference for Attractive Makeup Tracks Changes in Their Salivary Testosterone

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