Bridget Waller

About Bridget Waller

Bridget Waller, With an exceptional h-index of 42 and a recent h-index of 32 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Nottingham Trent University, specializes in the field of facial expression, communication, evolution, primates.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Pseudoreplication in primate communication research: 10 years on

Higher social tolerance is associated with more complex facial behavior in macaques

Tolerant macaque species are less impulsive and reactive

Personality traits predict social network size in older adults

Revisiting the baby schema by a geometric morphometric analysis of infant facial characteristics across great apes

The face in everyday social interaction: social outcomes and personality correlates of facial behaviour

Crested macaque facial movements are more intense and stereotyped in potentially risky social interactions

NetFACS: Using network science to understand facial communication systems

Bridget Waller Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

5732

Citations(since 2020)

2972

Cited By

3782

hIndex(all)

42

hIndex(since 2020)

32

i10Index(all)

66

i10Index(since 2020)

60

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Bridget Waller Skills & Research Interests

facial expression

communication

evolution

primates

Top articles of Bridget Waller

Pseudoreplication in primate communication research: 10 years on

International journal of primatology

2023/10/9

Higher social tolerance is associated with more complex facial behavior in macaques

Elife

2023/10/3

Tolerant macaque species are less impulsive and reactive

Animal Cognition

2023/9

Personality traits predict social network size in older adults

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

2023/6

Revisiting the baby schema by a geometric morphometric analysis of infant facial characteristics across great apes

Scientific Reports

2023/3/29

The face in everyday social interaction: social outcomes and personality correlates of facial behaviour

2022/10/10

Crested macaque facial movements are more intense and stereotyped in potentially risky social interactions

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B

2022/9/26

NetFACS: Using network science to understand facial communication systems

Behavior Research Methods

2022/8

Signal value of stress behaviour

Evolution and human behavior

2022/7/1

The language void 10 years on: multimodal primate communication research is still uncommon

Ethology Ecology & Evolution

2022/5/4

Validation of a battery of inhibitory control tasks reveals a multifaceted structure in non-human primates

PeerJ

2022/2/9

The face is central to primate multicomponent signals

International Journal of Primatology

2022/1/15

Revisiting Darwin's comparisons between human and non-human primate facial signals

Evolutionary human sciences

2022/1

Heterogeneity of performances in several inhibitory control tasks: male rhesus macaques are more easily distracted than females

Royal Society Open Science

2021/11/24

The social function of the feeling and expression of guilt

Royal Society open science

2020/12/9

Morphological variants of silent bared‐teeth displays have different social interaction outcomes in crested macaques (Macaca nigra)

American Journal of Physical Anthropology

2020/11

Dog faces exhibit anatomical differences in comparison to other domestic animals

The Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology

2020/9/24

Juliane Kaminski
Juliane Kaminski

H-Index: 27

Bridget Waller
Bridget Waller

H-Index: 29

Afterword: Extending FACS Beyond Primates

What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System (FACS)

2020/6/15

Measuring the evolution of facial ‘expression’using multi-species FACS

2020/6/1

Are there non-verbal signals of guilt?

PLoS One

2020/4/24

See List of Professors in Bridget Waller University(Nottingham Trent University)

Co-Authors

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