David Perrett
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Professor David Perrett studies face preferences and perception at the University of St Andrews.
David Perrett received the British Psychological Society President's Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychological Knowledge in 2000[1] and the Golden Brain Award in 2002.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ " Putting beauty back in the eye of the beholder", The Psychologist, January 2002. Award article for BPS President's Award.
- ^ Vision Scientist Wins Golden Brain Award for Research Showing How the Brain Interprets Faces, The Minerva Foundation.
[edit] External links
- Prof. David Perrett, faculty research profile
- The Perception Lab, Perrett's lab at the University of St. Andrews
[edit] Additional reading
- "Face It: Average Just Isn't Beautiful", Chicago Sun-Times, March 17, 1994.
- "Average Faces Get Low Beauty Rating", San Jose Mercury News, March 17, 1994.
- "Why Boyzone has them swooning", New Scientist, August 29, 1998.
- "A bit on the side", New Scientist, June 26, 1999.
- "Playing the Mating Game: When will a woman go for the hunk or the hubby?", Newsweek, July 5, 1999.
- "Top Brass: A voyage of discovery around the human mind; The 10 leading psychologists in Britain, as chosen by their peers", The Independent, October 14, 2001.
- "Like father like husband", New Scientist, February 2, 2002.