Alexander Danvers
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View article: Are women really (not) more talkative than men? A registered report of binary gender similarities/differences in daily word use.
Are women really (not) more talkative than men? A registered report of binary gender similarities/differences in daily word use. Open
Women are widely assumed to be more talkative than men. Challenging this assumption, Mehl et al. (2007) provided empirical evidence that men and women do not differ significantly in their daily word use, speaking about 16,000 words per day…
View article: Are women really (not) more talkative than men? A registered report of binary gender similarities/differences in daily word use
Are women really (not) more talkative than men? A registered report of binary gender similarities/differences in daily word use Open
Women are widely assumed to be more talkative than men. Challenging this assumption, Mehl et al. (2007) provided empirical evidence that men and women do not differ significantly in their daily word use, speaking about 16,000 words per day…
View article: A Multi-Timescale Analysis of Reward Functions Learned from Human-Automation Collaboration
A Multi-Timescale Analysis of Reward Functions Learned from Human-Automation Collaboration Open
View article: Loneliness and Time Alone in Everyday Life: A Descriptive-Exploratory Study of Subjective and Objective Social Isolation
Loneliness and Time Alone in Everyday Life: A Descriptive-Exploratory Study of Subjective and Objective Social Isolation Open
Loneliness—the subjective experience of social isolation—is a common experience that can become an enduring feature of everyday life. How does feeling lonely relate to spending time alone? In this descriptive-exploratory study, we used the…
View article: Loneliness and time alone in everyday life: A descriptive-exploratory study of subjective and objective social isolation
Loneliness and time alone in everyday life: A descriptive-exploratory study of subjective and objective social isolation Open
View article: Loneliness and Time Alone in Everyday Life: A Descriptive-Exploratory Study of Subjective and Objective Social Isolation
Loneliness and Time Alone in Everyday Life: A Descriptive-Exploratory Study of Subjective and Objective Social Isolation Open
View article: Deep multiple instance learning for foreground speech localization in ambient audio from wearable devices
Deep multiple instance learning for foreground speech localization in ambient audio from wearable devices Open
View article: Is Frequent Sighing an Indicator of Dispositional Negative Emotionality? A Multi-Sample, Multi-Measure Naturalistic-Observation Study
Is Frequent Sighing an Indicator of Dispositional Negative Emotionality? A Multi-Sample, Multi-Measure Naturalistic-Observation Study Open
Sighing is a common nonverbal everyday behavior thought to signal the experiencing of negative emotions. Prior research from a small-scale study suggests that observed daily expressions of sighing is associated with subclinical depression …
View article: Good for what? Power, character, and moral judgment.
Good for what? Power, character, and moral judgment. Open
The person-centered account of moral judgment suggests an evolutionary explanation for two puzzling findings from moral psychology: that people judge an act that had bad side effects as more intentional than an act that had good side effec…
View article: Effects of Therapeutic Intervention on Parentally Bereaved Children’s Emotion Reactivity and Regulation 15 Years Later
Effects of Therapeutic Intervention on Parentally Bereaved Children’s Emotion Reactivity and Regulation 15 Years Later Open
View article: Understanding Personality through Patterns of Daily Socializing: Applying Recurrence Quantification Analysis (RQA) to Naturalistically Observed Intensive Longitudinal Social Interaction Data
Understanding Personality through Patterns of Daily Socializing: Applying Recurrence Quantification Analysis (RQA) to Naturalistically Observed Intensive Longitudinal Social Interaction Data Open
Ambulatory assessment methods provide a rich approach for studying daily behavior. Too often, however, these data are analyzed in terms of averages, neglecting patterning of this behavior over time. This paper describes Recurrence Quantifi…
View article: Equilibria in Personality States: A Conceptual Primer for Dynamics in Personality States
Equilibria in Personality States: A Conceptual Primer for Dynamics in Personality States Open
We provide a basic, step–by–step introduction to the core concepts and mathematical fundamentals of dynamic systems modelling through applying the Change as Outcome model, a simple dynamical systems model, to personality state data. This m…
View article: Measures and Materials
Measures and Materials Open
View article: The Amplifying Role of Need in Giving Decisions
The Amplifying Role of Need in Giving Decisions Open
Hamilton's rule predicts that altruism should depend on costs incurred and benefits provided, but these depend on the relative needs of the donor and recipient. Rewriting Hamilton's rule to account for relative need suggests an amplifying …
View article: Registered Replication Report: A Large Multilab Cross-Cultural Conceptual Replication of Turri, Buckwalter, & Blouw (2015)
Registered Replication Report: A Large Multilab Cross-Cultural Conceptual Replication of Turri, Buckwalter, & Blouw (2015) Open
According to the Justified True Belief account of knowledge (JTB), a person can only truly know something if they have a belief that is both justified and true (i.e., knowledge is justified true belief). This account was challenged by Gett…
View article: Emotional Congruence and Judgments of Honesty and Bias
Emotional Congruence and Judgments of Honesty and Bias Open
Psychological and philosophical discussions typically understand honesty as reporting truth with propositional statements. In this model, emotions are often seen as irrelevant or a hindrance to honesty, because they can bias our reports. I…
View article: Dynamically Engaged Smiling Predicts Cooperation Above and Beyond Average Smiling Levels
Dynamically Engaged Smiling Predicts Cooperation Above and Beyond Average Smiling Levels Open
Smiling has been conceptualized as a signal of cooperative intent, yet smiles are easy to fake. We suggest that contextually appropriate, dynamically engaged smiling imposes an attentional cost, thereby making engaged smiling a plausible “…
View article: Smile Dynamics Paper
Smile Dynamics Paper Open