Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
0
Published in 2019 at "Archives of Sexual Behavior"
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-019-1437-2
Abstract: According to the dual mating strategy model, in short-term mating contexts women should forego paternal investment qualities in favor of mates with well-developed secondary sexual characteristics and dominant behavioral displays. We tested whether this model…
read more here.
Keywords:
term;
preferences facial;
women preferences;
masculinity ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2017 at "Psychoneuroendocrinology"
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2017.05.006
Abstract: Women's preferences for masculinity in men's faces seem to vary across the menstrual cycle and are assumed to be strongest around ovulation. A number of hormones have been proposed to underlie these subtle cyclic shifts.…
read more here.
Keywords:
effects stress;
preference;
masculinity;
stress women ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2022 at "Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences"
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0143
Abstract: The broad autism phenotype commonly refers to sub-clinical levels of autistic-like behaviour and cognition presented in biological relatives of autistic people. In a recent study, we reported findings suggesting that the broad autism phenotype may…
read more here.
Keywords:
increased facial;
facial masculinity;
autism;
masculinity ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
2
Published in 2022 at "IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management"
DOI: 10.1109/tem.2020.3008756
Abstract: Prior research studies how chief executive officers’ (CEOs’) demographic characteristics, such as gender and age, impact firm unethical behaviors. However, the effect of CEOs’ biological traits on corporate illegality is not fully known. Grounded in…
read more here.
Keywords:
facial masculinity;
corporate illegality;
masculinity;
male entrepreneurs ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2023 at "Frontiers in Psychology"
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1067487
Abstract: The current study investigated the ovulatory shift hypothesis, which suggests that women prefer more masculine traits when estradiol is high, and progesterone is low (E/P ratio). The current study used an eye tracking paradigm to…
read more here.
Keywords:
evidence;
visual attention;
facial masculinity;
attention facial ... See more keywords