-
1
Smiles when sharing
Published 2007“…In this study, 60 people were covertly filmed while interacting with a friend in two conditions: control and sharing. Smiles were classified into Duchenne (spontaneous) and non-Duchenne smiles. …”
Journal article -
2
Smiles when sharing
Published 2007“…In this study, 60 people were covertly filmed while interacting with a friend in two conditions: control and sharing. Smiles were classified into Duchenne (spontaneous) and non-Duchenne smiles. …”
Journal article -
3
-
4
-
5
The bidirectional relationship between smiles and situational contexts
Published 2023“…Smiles provide information about a social partner’s affect and intentions during social interaction. …”
Journal article -
6
SMILES REARRANGEMENTS PROMOTED BY COMPLEXATION TO CHROMIUM TRICARBONYL
Published 1995“…The chromium tricarbonyl promoted ipso-Smiles rearrangements of the O-phenyl to the N-phenyl derivatives of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine are reported. © 1995.…”
Journal article -
7
The reciprocal relationship between smiles and situational contexts
Published 2023“…Smiles provide information about a social partner’s affect and intentions during social interaction. …”
Journal article -
8
Duchenne smiles and the perception of generosity and sociability in faces
Published 2007“…As opposed to non-Duchenne smiles, Duchenne smiles involve the activity of facial muscles in the eye region (orbicularis oculi). …”
Journal article -
9
Smiles rearrangements promoted by complexation to chromium tricarbonyl
Published 1995Journal article -
10
Parametric arbitrage-free models for implied smile dynamics
Published 2010“…Implementation results are illustrated in detail and in the end we provide with simulation results of one day ahead implied smile.…”
Thesis -
11
Naturalistic observations of smiling and laughter in human group interactions
Published 2008“…Although smiling and laughter have received considerable attention from researchers, little is known about the way they are displayed in naturally occurring group interactions. …”
Journal article -
12
Naturalistic observations of smiling and laughter in human group interactions
Published 2008“…Although smiling and laughter have received considerable attention from researchers, little is known about the way they are displayed in naturally occurring group interactions. …”
Journal article -
13
Sex differences in the effect of smiling on social judgments: an evolutionary approach
Published 2008“…In an attempt to uncover the function of smiling behavior, the assessment of various evolutionary relevant traits was examined through people's judgments of neutral and smiling photographs. …”
Journal article -
14
The value of a smile: Game theory with a human face
Published 2001“…However, given that humans have the ability to smile falsely, the ability to detect intentions may go far beyond the ability to recognize a smile. …”
Journal article -
15
-
16
What Is the Nature of Little Red Dots and what Is Not, MIRI SMILES Edition
Published 2024“…We study 31 little red dots (LRD) detected by JADES/NIRCam and covered by the SMILES/MIRI survey, of which ∼70% are detected in the two bluest MIRI bands and 40% in redder MIRI filters. …”
Journal article -
17
The power of smiling: the adult brain networks underlying learned infant emotionality
Published 2019Journal article -
18
Relationship between smiling and laughter in humans (Homo sapiens): testing the power asymmetry hypothesis
Published 2008“…Three affiliative behaviours were recorded by focal sampling: spontaneous smiles, deliberate smiles and laughter. Interestingly, young men showed significantly higher proportions of deliberate smiles in comparison to laughter when interacting with people of a different age class than when interacting in same-age groups. …”
Journal article -
19
Showcase the smiles or the tears? How elicited perspectives determine optimal charity appeal content
Published 2024Journal article -
20
Relationship between smiling and laughter in humans (Homo sapiens): testing the power asymmetry hypothesis.
Published 2008“…Three affiliative behaviours were recorded by focal sampling: spontaneous smiles, deliberate smiles and laughter. Interestingly, young men showed significantly higher proportions of deliberate smiles in comparison to laughter when interacting with people of a different age class than when interacting in same-age groups. …”
Journal article