Visual cues to fertility are in the eye (movements) of the beholder

scientific article published on 17 August 2019

Visual cues to fertility are in the eye (movements) of the beholder is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1016/J.YHBEH.2019.104562
P698PubMed publication ID31356808

P2093author name stringDavid A Puts
Marc G Berman
Greg J Norman
Elizabeth A Necka
Omid Kardan
Kelly E Faig
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No compelling evidence that more physically attractive young adult women have higher estradiol or progesteroneQ90756353
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 cycleQ24683643
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Lady in Red: Hormonal Predictors of Women's Clothing ChoicesQ30488112
Color signal information content and the eye of the beholder: a case study in the rhesus macaqueQ30495143
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-trackingQ30813931
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Children with autism are neither systematic nor optimal foragersQ34472068
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Defending Yarbus: eye movements reveal observers' taskQ39223543
Efficacy of methods for ovulation estimation and their effect on the statistical detection of ovulation-linked behavioral fluctuationsQ40699029
Women are more likely to wear red or pink at peak fertilityQ43762268
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Within-cycle fluctuations in progesterone negatively predict changes in both in-pair and extra-pair desire among partnered womenQ46215632
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Facial coloration tracks changes in women's estradiolQ46755780
An inverse Yarbus process: predicting observers' task from eye movement patternsQ46787056
Is She Angry? (Sexually Desirable) Women "See" Anger on Female Faces.Q47640647
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Face inversion disrupts the perception of vertical relations between features in the right human occipito-temporal cortexQ48679040
No compelling positive association between ovarian hormones and wearing red clothing when using multinomial analysesQ50183008
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
P304page(s)104562
P577publication date2019-08-17
P1433published inHormones and BehaviourQ15760887
P1476titleVisual cues to fertility are in the eye (movements) of the beholder
P478volume115

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