Aiyana Willard

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2011-2015 Anthropology University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom 
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"Aiyana Willard"

Parents

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Joseph Henrich grad student Oxford (Evolution Tree)
Ara Norenzayan grad student 2011-2015 Oxford
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Publications

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Bendixen T, Lightner AD, Apicella C, et al. (2023) Gods are watching and so what? Moralistic supernatural punishment across 15 cultures. Evolutionary Human Sciences. 5: e18
Ross CT, Hooper PL, Smith JE, et al. (2023) Reproductive inequality in humans and other mammals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 120: e2220124120
McNamara RA, Senanayake R, Willard AK, et al. (2021) God's mind on morality. Evolutionary Human Sciences. 3: e6
Beheim B, Atkinson QD, Bulbulia J, et al. (2021) Treatment of missing data determined conclusions regarding moralizing gods. Nature. 595: E29-E34
White CJM, Willard AK, Baimel A, et al. (2021) Cognitive Pathways to Belief in Karma and Belief in God. Cognitive Science. 45: e12935
Willard AK, Baimel A, Turpin H, et al. (2020) Rewarding the good and punishing the bad: The role of karma and afterlife beliefs in shaping moral norms Evolution and Human Behavior. 41: 385-396
Lang M, Purzycki BG, Apicella CL, et al. (2019) Moralizing gods, impartiality and religious parochialism across 15 societies. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 286: 20190202
Willard AK, McNamara RA. (2019) The Minds of God(s) and Humans: Differences in Mind Perception in Fiji and North America. Cognitive Science. 43
Willard AK, Cingl L, Norenzayan A. (2019) Cognitive Biases and Religious Belief: A Path Model Replication in the Czech Republic and Slovakia With a Focus on Anthropomorphism Social Psychological and Personality Science. 11: 97-106
McNamara RA, Willard AK, Norenzayan A, et al. (2018) Weighing outcome vs. intent across societies: How cultural models of mind shape moral reasoning. Cognition. 182: 95-108
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