scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1016/J.YHBEH.2019.104562 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 31356808 |
P2093 | author name string | David A Puts | |
Marc G Berman | |||
Greg J Norman | |||
Elizabeth A Necka | |||
Omid Kardan | |||
Kelly E Faig | |||
P2860 | cites work | Women's Fertility Status Alters Other Women's Jealousy and Mate Guarding. | Q53131107 |
Concealed ovulation and clandestine copulation: a female contribution to human evolution | Q56430734 | ||
Meta-Analysis of Menstrual Cycle Effects on Women’s Mate Preferences | Q56485301 | ||
Does a Woman’s Skin Color Indicate Her Fertility Level? | Q59282818 | ||
How relationship status and sociosexual orientation influence the link between facial attractiveness and visual attention | Q59807470 | ||
Ovary and ovulation: Symmetry and ovulation in women | Q60325641 | ||
The myth of hidden ovulation: Shape and texture changes in the face during the menstrual cycle | Q60432751 | ||
Money, Status, and the Ovulatory Cycle | Q61687906 | ||
No compelling evidence that more physically attractive young adult women have higher estradiol or progesterone | Q90756353 | ||
Do women's faces become more attractive near ovulation? | Q91924598 | ||
"Using 26,000 diary entries to show ovulatory changes in sexual desire and behavior": Correction to Arslan et al. (2018) | Q92896146 | ||
Female facial attractiveness increases during the fertile phase of the menstrual cycle | Q24683643 | ||
Looking at faces from different angles: Europeans fixate different features in Asian and Caucasian faces | Q29035776 | ||
Lady in Red: Hormonal Predictors of Women's Clothing Choices | Q30488112 | ||
Color signal information content and the eye of the beholder: a case study in the rhesus macaque | Q30495143 | ||
Can women detect cues to ovulation in other women's faces? | Q30725150 | ||
Infant's visual preferences for facial traits associated with adult attractiveness judgements: data from eye-tracking | Q30813931 | ||
Women's attractiveness changes with estradiol and progesterone across the ovulatory cycle | Q34312291 | ||
Children with autism are neither systematic nor optimal foragers | Q34472068 | ||
The many faces of configural processing | Q34662389 | ||
Baboon sexual swellings: information content of size and color | Q34738437 | ||
Changes in Women's Facial Skin Color over the Ovulatory Cycle are Not Detectable by the Human Visual System | Q35680826 | ||
Facial resemblance to emotions: group differences, impression effects, and race stereotypes | Q36915860 | ||
Scanpath modeling and classification with hidden Markov models | Q38378077 | ||
ScanMatch: a novel method for comparing fixation sequences. | Q38500541 | ||
Face exploration dynamics differentiate men and women. | Q39148324 | ||
Defending Yarbus: eye movements reveal observers' task | Q39223543 | ||
Efficacy of methods for ovulation estimation and their effect on the statistical detection of ovulation-linked behavioral fluctuations | Q40699029 | ||
Women are more likely to wear red or pink at peak fertility | Q43762268 | ||
When familiarity breeds accuracy: cultural exposure and facial emotion recognition | Q43918922 | ||
Understanding eye movements in face recognition using hidden Markov models. | Q44025810 | ||
Happy mouth and sad eyes: scanning emotional facial expressions | Q45190676 | ||
Hormonal predictors of sexual motivation in natural menstrual cycles | Q45897374 | ||
Functional projection: how fundamental social motives can bias interpersonal perception. | Q46172185 | ||
Within-cycle fluctuations in progesterone negatively predict changes in both in-pair and extra-pair desire among partnered women | Q46215632 | ||
The dual function of social gaze | Q46538425 | ||
Facial coloration tracks changes in women's estradiol | Q46755780 | ||
An inverse Yarbus process: predicting observers' task from eye movement patterns | Q46787056 | ||
Is She Angry? (Sexually Desirable) Women "See" Anger on Female Faces. | Q47640647 | ||
Eye movements during emotion recognition in faces. | Q47787857 | ||
Face inversion disrupts the perception of vertical relations between features in the right human occipito-temporal cortex | Q48679040 | ||
No compelling positive association between ovarian hormones and wearing red clothing when using multinomial analyses | Q50183008 | ||
Women selectively guard their (desirable) mates from ovulating women. | Q50241134 | ||
Men's preference for the ovulating female is triggered by subtle face shape differences. | Q50792863 | ||
Signal content of red facial coloration in female mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx). | Q51789498 | ||
Eye movements are functional during face learning. | Q51991776 | ||
Bubbles: a technique to reveal the use of information in recognition tasks. | Q52018769 | ||
Using the ratio of urinary oestrogen and progesterone metabolites to estimate day of ovulation. | Q52456119 | ||
P304 | page(s) | 104562 | |
P577 | publication date | 2019-08-17 | |
P1433 | published in | Hormones and Behaviour | Q15760887 |
P1476 | title | Visual cues to fertility are in the eye (movements) of the beholder | |
P478 | volume | 115 |
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