Margo Wilson and Martin Daly were my PhD supervisors at McMaster University in Canada. We are currently collaborating on studies using facial EMG to explore disgust expressions toward faces varying in self-resemblance and apparent health, as well as expression copying of dynamic stimuli.
Dave Perrett runs The Perception Lab at the Univeristy of St Andrews. He and I are currently collaborating on studies investigating the hormonal mediation of preferences for self-resemblance in faces and voices.
Ben Jones studies perceptions of facial health and is a lecturer at the University of Aberdeen. We are collaborating on several projects about apparent health, self-resemblance, and the role of visual and social experience in shaping face processing and preferences.
Tony Little studies faces (and stickleback) at Liverpool University School of Biology. He is our primary collaborator and is especially involved in the project about the role of visual and social experience with faces.
Dave Feinberg is a graduate of the Perception Lab and currently studies vocal attractiveness at Harvard University. We are collaborating on studies of vocal similarity and the effects of masculine and feminine faces and voices on trustworthiness.
Craig Roberts studies MHC at the Liverpool University School of Biology. I was involved in the Twin Day that he and Marion Petrie organized to look at odour, face and voice preferences in monozygotic and dizygotic twins.
Bernie Tiddeman is a computer scientist at the University of St Andrews. He makes all the face manipulation possible.
Lars Penke studies evolution and significance of individual differences at Humboldt University in Berlin. I am involved in his longitudinal study of couples' faces preferences and he is involoved with our online testing site, FaceResearch.org, into German.
Ian Penton-Voak studies facial attractiveness at the University of Bristol. We have collaborated on the effects of self-resemblance on behaviour in an experimental economic game.
Peter Hancock studies face recognition at Stirling University. We co-authored a Behavioral and Brain Sciences commentary on non-economic factors in economic games.
Danny Krupp is a current member of the Daly-Wilson Lab and studies cooperation at McMaster University. We are collaborating on a study of the impact of different numbers of self-resembling players in a common-pool resource game.
Andrew Clark is a graduate of the Daly-Wilson Lab and is currently doing a post-doc on female-female competition at the University of Bristol with Ian Penton-Voak.
Pat Barclay is a graduate of the Daly-Wilson Lab and is currenlty doing a post-doc pn group cooperation at Cornell University.
Sean Myles is a former member of the Daly-Wilson Lab and studies gene-culture co-evolution and lactose tolerance in Leipzig at the Max Plank Institute.
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