Rodrigo A. Cardenas, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI |
Area:
early childhood CNS development, lateralization, hemispheric asymmetries, History of Neuroscience & PsychologyGoogle:
"Rodrigo Cardenas"Mean distance: 18.71 (cluster 15)
Parents
Sign in to add mentorLauren Julius Harris | grad student | 2010 | Michigan State | |
(Exploring the cognitive basis of individual differences in interest in infants.) |
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Publications
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Shirazi TN, Self H, Dawood K, et al. (2020) Pubertal timing predicts adult psychosexuality: Evidence from typically developing adults and adults with isolated GnRH deficiency. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 119: 104733 |
Shirazi TN, Rosenfield KA, Cárdenas RA, et al. (2019) No evidence that hormonal contraceptive use or circulating sex steroids predict complex emotion recognition. Hormones and Behavior. 119: 104647 |
Jünger J, Motta-Mena NV, Cardenas R, et al. (2018) Do women's preferences for masculine voices shift across the ovulatory cycle? Hormones and Behavior |
Harris LJ, Cárdenas RA, Stewart ND, et al. (2018) Are only infants held more often on the left? If so, why? Testing the attention-emotion hypothesis with an infant, a vase, and two chimeric tests, one "emotional," one not. Laterality. 1-33 |
Hill AK, Cárdenas RA, Wheatley JR, et al. (2017) Are there vocal cues to human developmental stability? Relationships between facial fluctuating asymmetry and voice attractiveness. Evolution and Human Behavior : Official Journal of the Human Behavior and Evolution Society. 38: 249-258 |
Hill AK, Cárdenas RA, Wheatley JR, et al. (2017) Are there vocal cues to human developmental stability? Relationships between facial fluctuating asymmetry and voice attractiveness Evolution and Human Behavior. 38: 249-258 |
Puts DA, Hill AK, Bailey DH, et al. (2016) Sexual selection on male vocal fundamental frequency in humans and other anthropoids. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 283 |
Gonzalez-Santoyo I, Wheatley JR, Welling LL, et al. (2015) The face of female dominance: Women with dominant faces have lower cortisol. Hormones and Behavior. 71: 16-21 |
Puts DA, Pope LE, Hill AK, et al. (2015) Fulfilling desire: evidence for negative feedback between men's testosterone, sociosexual psychology, and sexual partner number. Hormones and Behavior. 70: 14-21 |
Doll LM, Hill AK, Rotella MA, et al. (2014) How well do men's faces and voices index mate quality and dominance? Human Nature (Hawthorne, N.Y.). 25: 200-12 |