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Daniel Nettle

Researcher at Newcastle University

Publications -  240
Citations -  15300

Daniel Nettle is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 227 publications receiving 13492 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Nettle include University of Alberta & Radboud University Nijmegen.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cues of being watched enhance cooperation in a real-world setting

TL;DR: This paper examined the effect of an image of a pair of eyes on contributions to an honesty box used to collect money for drinks in a university coffee room and found that people paid nearly three times more for their drinks when eyes were displayed rather than a control image.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution of Personality Variation in Humans and Other Animals.

TL;DR: The author argues that each of the Big Five dimensions of human personality can be seen as the result of a trade-off between different fitness costs and benefits, and that genetic diversity will be retained in the population.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Paranoid Optimist: An Integrative Evolutionary Model of Cognitive Biases:

TL;DR: This article elaborate error management theory (EMT), predicting that if judgments are made under uncertainty, and the costs of false positive and false negative errors have been asymmetric over evolutionary history, selection should have favored a bias toward making the least costly error.
Book

Vanishing Voices: The Extinction of the World's Languages

TL;DR: In this article, where have all the languages gone and where have All the Languages Gone 2. A World of Diversity 3. Lost Words / Lost Worlds 4. The Ecology of Language 5. The Biological Wave 6. The Economic Wave 7. Why Something Should be done 8. Sustainable Futures
Book ChapterDOI

The Evolution of Cognitive Bias

TL;DR: This chapter describes research documenting adaptive biases across many domains, including inferences about danger, the cooperativeness of others, and the sexual and romantic interests of prospective mates, and addresses the question of why biases often seem to be implemented at the cognitive level, producing genuine misperceptions, rather than merely biases in enacted behavior.