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David Perrett studies how we recognise facial attributes and understand actions of others.
Current projects include the nature of cues in the face to attractiveness and health; the
impact of life stresses, parental relationships and development across puberty on appearance and mate choice
in adulthood; attraction to voice and to pheromones; decoding emotional expression and
deception; sharing of attention; and the use of computer graphics to enhance recognition.
David Perrett received the British Psychological Society President's Award (2000), the Golden Brain Award (2002), the Experimental Psychology Society Mid-Career prize (2008) and a British Academy Wolfson Research Professorship (2009-2012).
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dp@st-andrews.ac.uk |
Tel: +44 (0)1334 46 3044 |
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Stephen, I.D., Coetzee, V., Perrett, D. (2010) Carotenoid and melanin pigment coloration affect perceived human health. Evolution and Human Behaviour. In press. |
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Coetzee, V., Perrett, D.I., Stephen, I.D. (2009) Facial adiposity: A cue to health? Perception, 38, 1700-1711. |
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Perrett, D. I., Xiao, D., Barraclough, N.E., Keysers, C., Oram, M. W. (2009) Seeing the future: natural image sequences produce ‘anticipatory’ neuronal activity and bias perceptual report. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 62, 2081-2104.
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Cornwell, R.E., Perrett, D.I. (2008) Sexy sons and sexy daughters: the influence of parents' facial characteristics on offspring. Animal Behaviour, 76, 1843-1853. |
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