science wire
Psychology
Results 2051 - 2100 of 2350.
Psychology - Life Sciences - 03.02.2012
Public lectures explore the brain and behavior
Register for the lectures online or call 206-616-5274. See previous years' lectures on UWTV. How do fish hear and communicate with each other?
Psychology - Life Sciences - 01.02.2012

What does being committed to your marriage really mean? UCLA psychologists answer this question in a new study based on their analysis of 172 married couples over the first 11 years of marriage.
Life Sciences - Psychology - 01.02.2012
How does the compassionate brain, measured in the lab, predict what occurs in real life?
University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers are launching a new series of studies to understand how laboratory measures of virtuous qualities such as compassion relate to their behavior in the real world. Richard J. Davidson , founder of the UW's Center for Investigating Healthy Minds (CIHM) , at the Waisman Center, has received a three-year, $1.7 million grant from the John Templeton Foundation to develop laboratory and real-world measures of virtuous qualities such as altruism and compassion.
Psychology - Pedagogy - 25.01.2012

Teaching children with autism to 'talk things through in their head' may help them to solve complex day-to-day tasks, which could increase the chances of independent, flexible living later in life, according to new research from Durham University, the University of Bristol and City University London.
Psychology - 24.01.2012
Multitasking may harm the social and emotional development of tweenage girls, Stanford researchers say
Multitasking may harm the social and emotional development of tweenage girls, but face-to-face talks could save the day, say Stanford researchers Too much screen time can be detrimental to girls 8 to 12 years old, but there is a surprisingly straightforward alternative for greater social wellness.
Life Sciences - Psychology - 22.01.2012
Seeking the neurological roots of conflict
MIT neuroscientists explore how longstanding conflict influences empathy for others. MIT postdoc Emile Bruneau has long been drawn to conflict - not as a participant, but an observer. In 1994, while doing volunteer work in South Africa, he witnessed firsthand the turmoil surrounding the fall of apartheid; during a 2001 trip to visit friends in Sri Lanka, he found himself in the midst of the violent conflict between the Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan military.
Psychology - 18.01.2012

CHAMPAIGN, lll. A program designed to boost cognition in older adults also increased their openness to new experiences, researchers report, demonstrating for the first time that a non-drug intervention in older adults can change a personality trait once thought to be fixed throughout the lifespan.
Health - Psychology - 18.01.2012
International health experts call for a special UN session on mental health
Professor Harry Minas, Director of the Centre for International Mental Health at the University of Melbourne has joined experts from the US and the UK to call for a United Nations General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) on the topic.
Psychology - 10.01.2012

Online test allows public to assess their recall; scientists will use data to study long-term memory. We're hoping that thousands of people from all walks of life, and from all over the world, will go to the website and take part." —Dr Jon Simons from the University of Cambridge's Department of Experimental Psychology Today, Tuesday 10 January, researchers at the University of Cambridge launch what could be the world's biggest ever memory experiment.
Health - Psychology - 26.12.2011
Women with celiac disease suffer from depression, disordered eating
University pledges continued cooperation with NCAA inquiry Hotels to support RAINN over commencement weekend A message from President Rodney Erickson As lawmakers review child abuse laws, Erickson expresses support Blue out, canning efforts raise $47,000 to fight child abuse, rape UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
Psychology - Health - 22.12.2011

ANU graduate Brad Carron-Arthur is moving his feet for a good cause, running up the east coast of Australia to raise money for mental health research, programs and awareness.
Psychology - 22.12.2011
Persistence Pays Off in the Mating Game
AUSTIN, Texas — A new study co-authored by a University of Texas at Austin psychology professor suggests that self-deception may help men succeed in the mating game, while women will benefit more from effective communication.
Administration - Psychology - 21.12.2011

The key message is that the UK government, like many around the world, now recognises that economic measures such as GDP do not provide adequate information about a society's progress.
Health - Psychology - 20.12.2011
Developing nursing leadership and a support for nurses is crucial to the quality of patient care
Ward sisters/Charge nurses need to be a given a more prominent leadership role in hospitals if standards of acute nursing care are to be improved according to a new paper from the University of Birmingham's leading health policy unit the Health Services Management Centre The paper: (Time to Care?
Life Sciences - Psychology - 15.12.2011

Teenage brains undergo big changes, and they won't look or function like adult brains until well into one's 20s.
Linguistics & Literature - Psychology - 15.12.2011
People More Motivated to Give When They See Others Volunteering Abroad
AUSTIN, Texas — People are more inspired to give when they see others contributing their time and money to a good cause outside their home state, according to a new psychology study from The University of Texas at Austin.
Health - Psychology - 12.12.2011

Professor Ian Hickie, Executive Director of the University of Sydney's Brain and Mind Research Institute , has been named as one of eight commissioners to lead Australia's first National Mental Health Commission.
Psychology - Life Sciences - 08.12.2011

"If we think of the perceptual system as a democracy where each sense is like a person casting a vote and all votes are counted to reach a decision — although not all votes are counted equally — what our study shows is that the voters talk to one another and influence one another even before each casts a vote," said Ladan Shams, a UCLA associate professor of psychology and the senior author of the new study.
Life Sciences - Psychology - 08.12.2011
From stimulus to emotion: A role for cortex in emotional learning
From stimulus to emotion: A role for cortex in emotional learning A team of neurobiologists around Andreas Lüthi at the Friedrich Miescher Institute of Biomedical Research has shown for the first time that cortex, the largest area of the brain that is typically associated with higher functions such as perception and cognition, is also a prominent site of emotional learning.
Psychology - Life Sciences - 07.12.2011
Human brains unlikely to evolve into a supermind as price to pay would be too high
Human minds have hit an evolutionary "sweet spot" and - unlike computers - cannot continually get smarter without trade-offs elsewhere, according to research by the University of Warwick. Researchers asked the question why we are not more intelligent than we are given the adaptive evolutionary process.
Pedagogy - Psychology - 05.12.2011

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Parents are more likely to blame or doubt a child victim of sexual abuse when the suspected perpetrator is an adolescent rather than an adult, according to a new study that examined child molestation cases in four states. The findings also suggest that, regardless of the age of the perpetrator, parental blame/doubt toward the victim significantly increases if the victim is an adolescent.
Health - Psychology - 30.11.2011
2 million Californians report mental health needs; most receive little or no treatment
Nearly 2 million adults in California, about 8 percent of the population, need mental health treatment, but the majority receive no services or inadequate services, despite a state law mandating that health insurance providers include mental health treatment in their coverage options, a new report by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research shows.
Psychology - 23.11.2011

Eye, I, aye: investigating embodiment, identity and sociality and the Internet a talk from Elizabeth Churchill, on December 16th, at 10h15, in room BC 410 Abstract: In this talk I will discuss the increasingly broad remit of human computer interaction (HCI) as a discipline.
Psychology - Economics - 18.11.2011

Research into decision-making by European starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) may help to explain why many animals, including humans, sometimes exhibit irrational preferences. A study by Oxford University scientists in which starlings pecked on different coloured keys to gain a food reward shows that the birds pay too much attention to context: this makes them vulnerable to the sort of tricks that marketing specialists use to try to make human shoppers choose one product over another.
Health - Psychology - 18.11.2011
Beyond Bushfires, a study into community resilience and recovery
A long-term study into the health and wellbeing of community members affected by the 2009 Victorian bushfires, is being led by the University of Melbourne.
Psychology - 15.11.2011

People who fear the unknown or view uncertainty as especially negative or threatening are more likely to report symptoms of eating disorders, according to new ANU research. Alice Heikkonen, a PhD researcher in the Department of Psychology, has been looking at women aged 18-30 and has found a significant link between eating disorder symptoms and intolerance of uncertainty.
Psychology - 14.11.2011

Older people who give up driving report positive life impacts and say it's not all doom and gloom, according to new research by PhD student Sarah Walker from The Australian National University.
Psychology - 04.11.2011
Follow the crowd - with help from leading psychologists
Follow the crowd - with help from leading psychologists Events around the world have made 2011 the year of the crowd - from revolutionary protests in Egypt's Tahrir Square and anti-cuts protests in L
Health - Psychology - 02.11.2011
Desperate for a chocolate biscuit There’s an app for that
Beating comfort eating with help from your mobile A free app for iPhone, which is designed to help people tackle the habit of comfort eating and reduce the amount of high fat, high salt and high sugar snack food they consume, is being launched today (November 2) by the University of Birmingham.
Life Sciences - Psychology - 01.11.2011
Hippocampus Plays Bigger Memory Role Than Previously Thought
Human memory has historically defied precise scientific description, its biological functions broadly but imperfectly defined in psychological terms. In a pair of papers published in the November 2 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience , researchers at the University of California, San Diego report a new methodology that more deeply parses how and where certain types of memories are processed in the brain, and challenges earlier assumptions about the role of the hippocampus.
Psychology - Social Sciences - 31.10.2011
SEK 56 million in funding from the Swedish Research Council
The Swedish Research Council has reached the decision to grant over SEK 56 million (¤6.2 million) in support for 15 new research projects in the humanities, social sciences and educational sciences at Umeå University.
Health - Psychology - 31.10.2011
Children of deployed military at greater risk of engaging in violent behavior
Adolescent boys with at least one parent in the military are at elevated risk of engaging in school-based physical fighting, carrying a weapon and joining a gang, according to researchers at the University of Washington's School of Public Health.
Psychology - Life Sciences - 31.10.2011

Alexander Todorov, an associate professor of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University, has designed a new freshman seminar, "The Face: The Forces That Shape How We Perceive Others," to
Psychology - Life Sciences - 27.10.2011
Adoption under the spotlight of new University of Sussex research centre
Adoption under the spotlight of new University of Sussex research centre The major challenges facing adopted children and their families will be the focus of a new research centre at the University of Sussex.
Psychology - Life Sciences - 19.10.2011
Hosting Malaysia’s largest psychology conference
Linguistics & Literature - Psychology - 18.10.2011
Funny Finding: Men Win Humor Test (by a Hair)
Funny Finding: Men Win Humor Test (by a Hair) UC San Diego Researchers Used New Yorker Cartoons to Explore Gender Stereotype October 19, 2011 By Inga Kiderra Huffington Post ABC News and "Good Morning America" TIME Slate Scientific American Men are funnier than women, but only just barely and mostly to other men.
Health - Psychology - 14.10.2011

The Australian Foundation for Mental Health Research's (AFFIRM) Youth Ambassador Program has been officially launched by the Governor-General of Australia, Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce AC at The Australian National University.
Psychology - 12.10.2011
Children taught to read at seven still learn at same pace as a four year old
Search News & Events Search University of Warwick Search for people at Warwick Search Warwick Blogs Search past exam papers Search video Research from the University of Warwick has found children who attend schools that opt out of the national curriculum and are not taught to read until they are seven years old still learn at the same pace as a four year old.
Health - Psychology - 12.10.2011
Exercise gives mental health a boost
While most people know physical exercise helps them in losing weight or achieving better physical health, perhaps less well known is the extensive evidence concluding that exercise also benefits mental health.
History & Archeology - Psychology - 04.10.2011
Wash away your troubles with soap
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—Cleaning your hands removes more than dirt, it also removes residues of the past, such as guilt and doubt, a new University of Michigan study finds.
Psychology - 03.10.2011

The science of love under the spotlight at Durham University Poets and writers have done their best to understand love but it remains a mystery. Now researchers at Durham University are setting out to unravel the science of love. The Durham psychologists and anthropologists hope to get a better evolutionary understanding of the emotional 'fuzziness' of love.
Economics - Psychology - 30.09.2011

An overwhelming number of defrauded people are older than 50 - but the profile of the typical target is not who you would expect, say the founders of the new interdisciplinary Research Center on the Prevention of Financial Fraud.
Psychology - 30.09.2011
Feeling entitled makes dull tasks drag on
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—People who feel entitled may think performing dull tasks is a waste of their precious time, resulting in a perception that time passes slowly, according to a new University of Michigan study.
Psychology - 26.09.2011
Who are you People yearn for positive perception about themselves
Sept. Who are you? People yearn for positive perception about themselves ANN ARBOR, Mich.—People care about how others view them and will go to great lengths to repair negative perceptions, a new University of Michigan study found.
Health - Psychology - 26.09.2011
Rebranding exercise: Quality of life a better motivator than Live longer
Sept. Rebranding exercise: 'Quality of life' a better motivator than 'Live longer' Listen to podcast ANN ARBOR, Mich.—A new University of Michigan study finds that the most convincing exercise message emphasizes immediate benefits that enhance daily quality of life. Health care, business and public health have presumed that promoting health and longevity benefits from exercise will motivate people to exercise.
Linguistics & Literature - Psychology - 23.09.2011
Half price theatre tickets for University staff
TinyHouse Productions are offering University staff discounted tickets for Anthony Neilson's play "Normal" at the Carriageworks Theatre, from Wednesday 28 September to Saturday 1 October.
Psychology - Pedagogy - 21.09.2011

Elementary schools using the bullying prevention program Steps to Respect saw a reduction in physical bullying and in the number of teachers reporting fighting as a big problem, according to a new University of Washington study.
Economics - Psychology - 21.09.2011
Escalation threatens strike resolution, say researchers
New research has added more gloom to the threat of strikes by showing how the emotional strain of protracted negotiations can lock rivals on a path to mutual destruction.
Psychology - Administration - 20.09.2011
Hogg Foundation Funds New Initiative to Provide Safer, More Effective Alternatives to Seclusion and Restraint
Sept. AUSTIN, Texas — The Hogg Foundation for Mental Health at The University of Texas at Austin is funding a new statewide initiative to help residential treatment centers adopt safer, more effective tools than traumatic and potentially deadly seclusion and restraint practices commonly used to manage the behavior of children and youth.
Linguistics & Literature - Psychology - 20.09.2011
Phonetics Grant Success
Barry Heselwood (School of Modern Languages, Linguistics and Phonetics) has been successful in the Arts and Humanities Research Council Research Networks scheme.
Life Sciences - Today
Understanding the Brain - TU Ilmenau's EU EMBRACE Project Nominated for European Excellence Award
Understanding the Brain - TU Ilmenau's EU EMBRACE Project Nominated for European Excellence Award
Social Sciences - Today
A manual addresses, for the first time in Spain, child and adolescent sexual exploitation
A manual addresses, for the first time in Spain, child and adolescent sexual exploitation

Environment - Mar 26
Changing vegetation in thawing permafrost increases emissions of greenhouse gases
Changing vegetation in thawing permafrost increases emissions of greenhouse gases

Environment - Mar 26
University of Manchester hits major sustainability milestone, with Main Campus becoming 100% 'Zero Landfill'
University of Manchester hits major sustainability milestone, with Main Campus becoming 100% 'Zero Landfill'

Social Sciences - Mar 26
"It would be naive to believe that a social media ban will solve all problems"
"It would be naive to believe that a social media ban will solve all problems"

Health - Mar 26
Earlier detection, better outcomes: Irish researchers target rising bowel cancer rates with new blood test
Earlier detection, better outcomes: Irish researchers target rising bowel cancer rates with new blood test
Environment - Mar 26
UK must improve energy efficiency to end 50 years of policy failure and prevent future energy crises, study argues
UK must improve energy efficiency to end 50 years of policy failure and prevent future energy crises, study argues

Mathematics - Mar 26
From Materials to Medical Imaging, Fonseca's Work Shapes the Future of Innovation
From Materials to Medical Imaging, Fonseca's Work Shapes the Future of Innovation









