Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Kaylee E. N. Phimmasene's research investigates women's affiliation and sociality throughout the menstrual cycle, examining variations across cycle phases and their association with hormonal levels like progesterone and estradiol. Her work, including publications in 2023 and 2025, explores how these biological changes may influence social behaviors and motivations. Phimmasene collaborates with researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Anastasia Makhanova, Mikayla Tolliver, and Mikayla D. M. Joslin, with whom she shares multiple publications. Her scholarly output, while nascent, indicates a focus on the intersection of reproductive biology and social psychology.
Metrics
- h-index: 1
- Publications: 2
- Citations: 6
Selected Publications
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Women's affiliation across the menstrual cycle: Cycle phase variation and associations with progesterone and estradiol (2025)
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Sociality and Motivation: Women's Affiliative Trends Throughout the Menstrual Cycle (2023)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Women's affiliation across the menstrual cycle: Cycle phase variation and associations with progesterone and estradiol
- Sociality and Motivation: Women's Affiliative Trends Throughout the Menstrual Cycle
- Women's affiliation across the menstrual cycle: Cycle phase variation and associations with progesterone and estradiol
- Sociality and Motivation: Women's Affiliative Trends Throughout the Menstrual Cycle
- Women's affiliation across the menstrual cycle: Cycle phase variation and associations with progesterone and estradiol
- Sociality and Motivation: Women's Affiliative Trends Throughout the Menstrual Cycle
- Sociality and Motivation: Women's Affiliative Trends Throughout the Menstrual Cycle
- Sociality and Motivation: Women's Affiliative Trends Throughout the Menstrual Cycle
- Women's affiliation across the menstrual cycle: Cycle phase variation and associations with progesterone and estradiol
- Women's affiliation across the menstrual cycle: Cycle phase variation and associations with progesterone and estradiol
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