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Breaking News
psychology
Stories 181 - 200 |
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Ya-Ya Sisterhoods
Stab You in the Back
interview
Aug 26, 2009 2:09 PM CDT
Ya-Ya Sisterhoods Stab You in the Back
Author discusses the trials of adult female friendship
(Newser)
- According to today’s “Sex and the City ethos,” friends are there when romance falters. But in truth, female friendships “are just as complicated as marriages,” author Lucinda Rosenfeld tells Salon. That’s particularly true when it comes to envy, a theme of Rosenfeld’s new...
Need to Think Hard? Hold
a Big Clipboard
Aug 26, 2009 12:00 PM CDT
Need to Think Hard? Hold a Big Clipboard
Holding heavy objects makes us bear down, study suggests
(Newser)
- Holding heavier objects could affect your thoughts and how you deal with problems. A University of Amsterdam researcher broke subjects into two groups, giving half a 1.5-pound clipboard and the rest a 2.3-pound clipboard. He then asked them several questions and discovered that the mere 0.8-pound difference...
Common Psychology Myths
OPINION
Aug 25, 2009 9:35 PM CDT
Common Psychology Myths
Armchair therapists need to shut up
(Newser)
- Everyone likes to pretend they know things about psychology. Unfortunately, most of what you hear is total crap, a psychology student writes for
Cracked
. Some top offenders:
Let Your Anger Out, You’ll Feel Better:
Actually, you’ll just want to be more angry. “Lashing out to control your
...
Forget Comfort Food:
We Shun It in Turmoil
Aug 25, 2009 1:55 PM CDT
Forget Comfort Food: We Shun It in Turmoil
Studies suggest we don't seek solace in the familiar
(Newser)
- Conventional wisdom has it that when we face big changes, we look to the familiar to get us through—whether it’s comfort food or music we’ve loved for years. But new studies suggest the opposite is true, that “change begets change,” in the words of one...
Va. Tech
Shooter Denied
Homicidal Thoughts
Aug 19, 2009 2:45 PM CDT
Va. Tech Shooter Denied Homicidal Thoughts
(Newser)
- Recently discovered records show the Virginia Tech gunman denied homicidal thoughts to a school counselor nearly a year and half before the worst mass shootings in modern US history. Seung-Hui Cho denied the thoughts in a session with counselor Sherry Lynch Conrad on Dec. 14, 2005. On April 16, 2007,...
Nature Makes You Nicer
Aug 18, 2009 4:55 PM CDT
Nature Makes You Nicer
People more focused on others when primed with natural imagery, research shows
(Newser)
- Being around the natural world or representations of it makes you a better person, Miller-McCune reports. A study finds that people shown slides of natural landscapes rated community-oriented goals—such as “to work for the betterment of society”—as more important to them than self-oriented goals—for example,...
Video Games: The New Prozac
Aug 18, 2009 10:26 AM CDT
Video Games: The New Prozac
Classic time-wasters seem to ease the symptoms of depression in studies
(Newser)
- If depression's got you down, it might be time to turn to your Wii over your wee blue pills, reports the
Washington Post
in a look at how video games might ease the disease. For one depression sufferer, Bejeweled was "a big help in getting through to the next...
Optimistic Women Face Lower Heart Disease Risk
Aug 11, 2009 10:23 AM CDT
Optimistic Women Face Lower Heart Disease Risk
Subjects less likely to die of any cause over set period
(Newser)
- Women 50 and up who see the glass as half full have a lower risk of getting heart disease—or dying of any cause—than their half-empty peers, a study suggests. Researchers found that over 8 years, the most optimistic subjects in their 97,000-woman-strong study faced a 9% lower...
Soldier KIA,
But Adopted Puppy Comes
to America
Aug 8, 2009 4:15 PM CDT
Soldier KIA, But Adopted Puppy Comes to America
He took in stray in Iraqi war zone
(Newser)
- An Army major killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq has left a canine legacy—Laia, a stray puppy who made it back to America, the
Los Angeles Times
reports. Working on a transition team, Steven Hutchison found the dog loafing around his vehicle after a meeting. “Maj. Hutchison...
Studies Agree: Happiness Comes With Age
Aug 8, 2009 8:52 AM CDT
Studies Agree: Happiness Comes With Age
Mental health keeps improving even into one's '90s
(Newser)
- Greater happiness and better mental health may be the big payoff for aging. Exceptions abound, of course, but people generally get happier as they get older because they've learned how to tune out all the negative stuff, say researchers. A spate of new studies suggests that older people have better...
Therapy to
'Cure' Gays
Is Bogus:
Shrinks
Aug 6, 2009 6:56 AM CDT
Therapy to 'Cure' Gays Is Bogus: Shrinks
(Newser)
- Claims that sexual orientation can be changed through therapy have no scientific credibility, finds a new report by the American Psychological Association. The group reviewed 83 journal articles published over several decades and found that many studies purporting to show successful changed sexuality "contain serious design flaws." The...
Gaydar: It's All in the Eyes
Aug 4, 2009 12:40 PM CDT
Gaydar: It's All in the Eyes
(Newser)
- Gaydar is real, according to a new study, but only if you don’t think about it too hard. Participants were shown the faces of 98 straight women and 94 lesbians taken from a dating website, reports Miler-McCune, and were able to guess sexual orientation rapidly, at a rate better...
Shrinks Fume
Over Wiki's
'Rorschach
Cheat Sheet'
Jul 29, 2009 2:12 AM CDT
Shrinks Fume Over Wiki's 'Rorschach Cheat Sheet'
(Newser)
- Psychologists are seeing red in a row over Rorschach's famous inkblots, the
New York Times
reports. The original series of 10 inkblot images, whose interpretations are used to gain insight into a viewer's mind, have been posted on Wikipedia along with the most common responses. Psychologists fear that some people...
Wall Street Lives, Dies
by Overconfidence: Gladwell
ANALYSIS
Jul 20, 2009 4:31 PM CDT
Wall Street Lives, Dies by Overconfidence: Gladwell
(Newser)
- Confidence is key to the banking game, but an overabundance of it seems to have made the industry’s titans so delusional they blundered into the financial crisis, Malcolm Gladwell writes in the
New Yorker
. “The roots of Wall Street’s crisis were not structural or cognitive so much...
Girls Bond,
Boys Compete:
Brain Study
Jul 17, 2009 4:24 PM CDT
Girls Bond, Boys Compete: Brain Study
Scans confirm gender split on one-on-one interaction
(Newser)
- Ever wonder why girls are so fixated on swapping friendship bracelets? They may just be wired that way, according to a new study. Using MRIs to look inside tweens' and teens' brains, researchers found that one-on-one interactions got girls’ synapses firing,
Time
reports. Boys focused less on other individuals than...
The Power
of Negative Thinking
Jul 8, 2009 2:50 PM CDT
The Power of Negative Thinking
Better to acknowledge bad feelings than recite phony good ones
(Newser)
- Deliberate positive thinking—from Norman Vincent Peale to Stuart Smalley—has long been touted as a way to overcome feelings of worthlessness and self-doubt. But a new study suggests that repeating positive mantras may often backfire, making people with low self-esteem feel even worse about themselves. For many, it may...
Positive Thinking Can Make You Feel Worse: Study
Jun 22, 2009 10:10 AM CDT
Positive Thinking Can Make You Feel Worse: Study
Affirmations don't help low self-esteem
(Newser)
- It turns out the Little Engine That Could had it all wrong. Repeating positive statements to yourself doesn’t appear to help people with low self-esteem, according to a new study. Researchers asked students to repeat statements like “I am a lovable person” to themselves, then measured their mood....
The Way You Hold Your Drink Speaks Volumes
May 30, 2009 2:20 AM CDT
The Way You Hold Your Drink Speaks Volumes
A gossip? Fun-lover? Psychologist sees clues in how you booze
(Newser)
- The way you hold your drink says a lot about you, psychologist Glenn Wilson tells the BBC. Wilson studied 500 drinkers at the behest of a bar chain, and discerned a series of notable types. Among them:
The gossip: Will hold a wineglass by the bowl, often gesticulating with it
...
Uncertainty, Not
Poverty, Behind
Recession Blues
ANALYSIS
May 21, 2009 8:32 AM CDT
Uncertainty, Not Poverty, Behind Recession Blues
It's not the lack of funds, it's the lack of knowing that brings us down
(Newser)
- Americans are worrying more than they were last year, and happiness is down while sadness is up, writes Daniel Gilbert in the
New York Times
. But it’s not the lightness of our pocketbooks that’s weighing on us; it’s the uncertainty of the times. While most of us...
'Healthy' Fast Food Eaters
Mull the Salad, Buy the Fried
OPINION
May 17, 2009 9:20 AM CDT
'Healthy' Fast Food Eaters Mull the Salad, Buy the Fried
Companies like KFC know how to play to customers' cravings
(Newser)
- KFC's grilled chicken giveaway may have been a bust, but the company actually got what it wanted—luring health-conscious eaters back to the franchise, argues Steve Almond in the
Washington Post.
The chicken chain's CEO appeared on Oprah to apologize for pulling the plug on the offer, yet "his...
Stories 181 - 200 |
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