New "golden" ratios for facial beauty. (65/122)

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Attractiveness in African American and Caucasian women: is beauty in the eyes of the observer? (66/122)

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Same-sex gaze attraction influences mate-choice copying in humans. (67/122)

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Beauty and the beholder: highly individual taste for abstract, but not real-world images. (68/122)

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Crossing the 'uncanny valley': adaptation to cartoon faces can influence perception of human faces. (69/122)

In this study we assessed whether there is a single face space common to both human and cartoon faces by testing whether adaptation to cartoon faces can affect perception of human faces. Participants were shown Japanese animation cartoon videos containing faces with abnormally large eyes. The use of animated videos eliminated the possibility of position-dependent retinotopic adaptation (because the faces appear at many different locations) and more closely simulated naturalistic exposure. Adaptation to cartoon faces with large eyes significantly shifted preferences for human faces toward larger eyes, consistent with a common, non-retinotopic representation for both cartoon and human faces. This supports the possibility that there are representations that are specific to faces yet common to all kinds of faces.  (+info)

Functional and aesthetic results of immediate reconstruction of traumatic thumb defects by toe-to-thumb transplantation. (70/122)

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Recurrent, robust and scalable patterns underlie human approach and avoidance. (71/122)

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e-Ana and e-Mia: A content analysis of pro-eating disorder Web sites. (72/122)

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