Dr Carlos Crivelli is a behavioral scientist interested in mapping human diversity and extending scientific knowledge beyond laboratory settings in the field of affective science and social interaction.
Dr Crivelli holds an MSc and a PhD in Methodology of Behavioral and Health Sciences from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (Spain) under the supervision of Prof. José-Miguel Fernández-Dols. During his PhD, he was a visiting scholar at Boston College (supervisor: Prof. James A. Russell) and at the University of Glasgow (supervisor: Dr. Rachael E. Jack).
Dr Crivelli’s research provides a descriptive and explanatory framework for facial displays, social influence, and emotions beyond laboratory settings and the usual Western/Eastern educated and industrialized samples. On the one hand, Dr Crivelli conducts studies in natural settings using observational methods to study social interaction and facial displays using a behavioral ecology approach (e.g., Crivelli, Carrera, & Fernández-Dols, 2015; Crivelli & Fridlund, 2018). On the other hand, Dr Crivelli overcomes ethnocentric assumptions derived from Western theories of emotion, facial displays, and social influence by studying small-scale, indigenous populations such as the Trobrianders of Papua New Guinea or the Mwani of Mozambique (e.g., Crivelli, Jarillo, Russell, & Fernández-Dols, 2016; Crivelli, Russell, Jarillo, & Fernández-Dols, 2016).