The relative importance of the face and body in judgments of human physical attractiveness

2009 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 409-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas E. Currie ◽  
Anthony C. Little
Liquidity ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-109
Author(s):  
Ellya Sestri

An increasingly rapid technological progress in the era of globalization in the business world, so do not rule out the possibility that a decision-making is something that is very vital in determining the decisions to be taken in the face of competitive business world. Decision making can be influenced by several aspects, this can affect the speed of decision making by the decision maker in which decisions must be quick and accurate. Lecturer Performance Assessment Using the Analytical Hierarchy Process is a decision support system that aims to assess faculty performance according to certain criteria. This system of faculty performance appraisal criteria to map a hierarchy, where each hierarchy will be performed pairwise comparison, the pairwise comparisons between criteria, so to get a comparison of the relative importance of criteria with each other. The results of this comparison is then analyzed to obtain the priority of each criterion. Once completed and performed an assessment of alternative options to be compared and calculated to obtain the best alternatives according to established criteria.


Author(s):  
Francesco Franco ◽  
Kenneth A. Cunefare ◽  
Massimo Ruzzene

Sandwich panels, comprising face sheets enclosing a core, are increasingly common structural elements in a variety of applications, including aircraft fuselages and flight surfaces, vehicle panels, lightweight enclosures, and bulkheads. The design flexibility associated with such composite structures provides significant opportunities for tailoring the structure to the load and dynamic response requirements for the particular application. Design flexibility encompasses the details of the face sheets and the core. This paper deals with the numerical optimization of different sandwich configurations for the purposes of achieving reduced structural acoustic response. Laminated face sheets and core geometries, comprising honeycomb and truss-like structures, are considered. The relative importance of the mass and stiffening properties of the core and face sheets are discussed. The optimization work is carried out using commercial codes. Benefits and limits of using an optimization algorithm based on gradient methods are highlighted.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordan Fish ◽  
Daniel R O'Donnell ◽  
Abhijna Parigi ◽  
Ian Dworkin ◽  
Aaron P Wagner

Standing genetic variation and the historical environment in which that variation arises (evolutionary history) are both potentially significant determinants of a population’s capacity for evolutionary response to a changing environment. We evaluated the relative importance of these two factors in influencing the evolutionary trajectories in the face of sudden environmental change. We used the open-ended digital evolution software Avida to examine how historic exposure to predation pressures, different levels of genetic variation, and combinations of the two, impact anti-predator strategies and competitive abilities evolved in the face of threats from new, invasive, predator populations. We show that while standing genetic variation plays some role in determining evolutionary responses, evolutionary history has the greater influence on a population’s capacity to evolve effective anti-predator traits. This adaptability likely reflects the relative ease of repurposing existing, relevant genes and traits, and the broader potential value of the generation and maintenance of adaptively flexible traits in evolving populations.


2005 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 236-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malia F. Mason ◽  
Elizabeth P. Tatkow ◽  
C. Neil Macrae

Gaze direction is a vital communicative channel through which people transmit information to each other. By signaling the locus of social attention, gaze cues convey information about the relative importance of objects, including other people, in the environment. For the most part, this information is communicated via patterns of gaze direction, with gaze shifts signaling changes in the objects of attention. Noting the relevance of gaze cues in social cognition, we speculated that gaze shifts may modulate people's evaluations of others. We investigated this possibility by asking participants to judge the likability (Experiment 1) and physical attractiveness (Experiment 2) of targets displaying gaze shifts indicative of attentional engagement or disengagement with the participants. As expected, person evaluation was moderated by the direction of gaze shifts, but only when the judgment under consideration was relevant to participants. We consider how and when gaze shifts may modulate person perception and its associated behavioral products.


1994 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 387-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
James D. Morrow

The problems of distribution and information impede international cooperation. They arise when actors select how they will cooperate. An exploration of the interaction between these problems using a limited information model of cooperation leads to six conclusions. First, leadership solutions to coordination problems always exist, but leadership here is very different from hegemonic provision of public goods. Second, actors can cooperate in the face of anarchy even without a shadow of the future. Third, diffuse reciprocal strategies arise naturally in coordination problems. Fourth, norms and institutions are intertwined within successful cooperation. Fifth, the form of cooperation on an issue varies with the relative importance of distribution and information. Finally and most important, distributional and informational problems interfere with each other. Arrangements to cooperate can successfully address one, but not both, of these problems.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document