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Scientific American
|
March 18, 2025
Why People Like Expressive Faces: Grins and frowns do more than just broadcast emotions
Eithne Kavanagh, Jamie Whitehouse, Bridget Waller
Scientific Reports
|
June 13, 2024
Being facially expressive is socially advantageous
Eithne Kavanagh, Jamie Whitehouse, Bridget M Waller
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|
November 26, 2025
Facial expression is a group cohesion solution
Bridget M Waller, Jamie Whitehouse, Eithne Kavanagh
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior
|
June 15, 2026
Facially Expressive People are More Popular in Newly Formed Groups: A Social Network Analysis
Alisa Balabanova, Eithne Kavanagh, Tom Kupfer, et al.
Evolutionary Human Sciences
|
July 13, 2022
Revisiting Darwin's comparisons between human and non-human primate facial signals
Eithne Kavanagh, Clare Kimock, Jamie Whitehouse, et al.
Biology Letters
|
May 27, 2020
Chimpanzee lip-smacks confirm primate continuity for speech-rhythm evolution
André S Pereira, Eithne Kavanagh, Catherine Hobaiter, et al.
The British Journal of Social Psychology
|
March 10, 2017
Change commitment in low-status merger partners: The role of information processing, relative ingroup prototypicality, and merger patterns
Miriam Rosa, Eithne Kavanagh, Pavel Kounov, et al.
Iscience
|
June 15, 2026
Spontaneous facial expressivity predicts real-world social network size and richness
Eithne Kavanagh, Alisa Balabanova, Jasmine Rollings, et al.
Royal Society Open Science
|
August 5, 2021
Dominance style is a key predictor of vocal use and evolution across nonhuman primates
Eithne Kavanagh, Sally E Street, Felix O Angwela, et al.
Page
of 1
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (1-10 of 9) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 1
Scientific American
|
March 18, 2025
Why People Like Expressive Faces: Grins and frowns do more than just broadcast emotions
Eithne Kavanagh, Jamie Whitehouse, Bridget Waller
Scientific Reports
|
June 13, 2024
Being facially expressive is socially advantageous
Eithne Kavanagh, Jamie Whitehouse, Bridget M Waller
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|
November 26, 2025
Facial expression is a group cohesion solution
Bridget M Waller, Jamie Whitehouse, Eithne Kavanagh
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior
|
June 15, 2026
Facially Expressive People are More Popular in Newly Formed Groups: A Social Network Analysis
Alisa Balabanova, Eithne Kavanagh, Tom Kupfer, et al.
Evolutionary Human Sciences
|
July 13, 2022
Revisiting Darwin's comparisons between human and non-human primate facial signals
Eithne Kavanagh, Clare Kimock, Jamie Whitehouse, et al.
Biology Letters
|
May 27, 2020
Chimpanzee lip-smacks confirm primate continuity for speech-rhythm evolution
André S Pereira, Eithne Kavanagh, Catherine Hobaiter, et al.
The British Journal of Social Psychology
|
March 10, 2017
Change commitment in low-status merger partners: The role of information processing, relative ingroup prototypicality, and merger patterns
Miriam Rosa, Eithne Kavanagh, Pavel Kounov, et al.
Iscience
|
June 15, 2026
Spontaneous facial expressivity predicts real-world social network size and richness
Eithne Kavanagh, Alisa Balabanova, Jasmine Rollings, et al.
Royal Society Open Science
|
August 5, 2021
Dominance style is a key predictor of vocal use and evolution across nonhuman primates
Eithne Kavanagh, Sally E Street, Felix O Angwela, et al.
Page
of 1