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Khandis R. Blake

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  55
Citations -  836

Khandis R. Blake is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Sexualization. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 39 publications receiving 462 citations. Previous affiliations of Khandis R. Blake include University of New South Wales.

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Standardized protocols for characterizing women's fertility: A data-driven approach

TL;DR: A cost-effective, pragmatic, and standardized protocol that will allow researchers to test whether fertility effects exist or not and provide a data-driven method of best practices for characterizing women's fertile phase is provided.
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Aggression in Women: Behavior, Brain and Hormones

TL;DR: More gender-specific theory-driven hypothesis testing is needed with larger samples of women and aggression paradigms relevant to women, and under some circumstances, oxytocin may increase aggression by enhancing reactivity to provocation and simultaneously lowering perceptions of danger that normally inhibit many women from retaliating.
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To which world regions does the valence–dominance model of social perception apply?

Benedict C. Jones, +243 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that, while the valence–dominance model generalizes very well across regions when dimensions are forced to be orthogonal, regional differences are revealed when the authors use different extraction methods and correlate and rotate the dimension reduction solution.
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On Attenuated Interactions, Measurement Error, and Statistical Power: Guidelines for Social and Personality Psychologists:

TL;DR: This investigation shows why even a programmatic series of six studies employing 2 × 2 designs, with samples exceeding N = 500, can be woefully underpowered to detect genuine effects.
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Income inequality not gender inequality positively covaries with female sexualization on social media

TL;DR: It is shown that female sexualization and physical appearance enhancement are most prevalent in environments that are economically unequal, and income inequality positively covaried with sexy-selfie prevalence, particularly within more developed nations.