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Research Associate in the Department of Psychology

Biography

I am a cross-cultural psychologist. My main interest is in understanding human behavioural adaptation to ensure the survival of offspring and kin. My work integrates evolutionary biology/psychology and behavioural sciences.

Currently, I am working on how to protect children from air pollution in Nepal and Indonesia, two countries with significant air pollution issues. This research methodology includes self-report questionnaires, behavioural observation, and health interventions.

In my previous postdoc at UCL, I researched how cultures, such as ethnicities, regions of residence, and religion, influenced the development of empathy and prosocial behaviour in Indonesia, a country with high cultural diversity, using questionnaires, experimental behaviour, and observational experiments.

My PhD research focused on homosexuality in Indonesia using an evolutionary approach. I tested the kin selection hypothesis, facial femininity, and the older brother effect in homosexual men. In my PhD, I was also involved in projects about handedness in a non-industrialized society and local adaptation of people who live in a risky area (i.e., volcano). During my PhD, I employed a diverse range of research methods, such as questionnaires, genealogical data, interviews, experimental behaviour, and economic games.

Images of fieldsite

Research interests

  • Cross-cultural psychology
  • Evolution and development of empathy
  • Evolution of homosexuality

Publications

Journal Article