Sentences with phrase «of psychology today»

Spending this morning with the current issue of Psychology Today and stumbled upon a great article on Dr. John Gottman, leading couples researcher and author.
Susan Johnson, Ed.D., writes on this subject in the March / April 1994 issue of Psychology Today in an article entitled, «Love: the Immutable Longing for Contact.»
In the June issue of Psychology Today, there was an article about relationships based on the psychotherapy work that Schnarch conducted with couples.
Many men who come to couples therapy are often disgruntled about their partner's poor financial decisions, said F. Diane Barth, a psychotherapist and the author of the Psychology Today blog Off The Couch.
It should have been published in the 1320 edition of Psychology Today.
She is the author of The Psychology Today Omnibook of Personal Development; Short Lives: Artists in Pursuit of Self - Destruction; The Working Actor: A Guide to the Profession; and co-editor (with John Brockman) of How Things Are: A Science Tool - Kit for the Mind.
According to Dr. Marilyn Price - Mitchell of Psychology Today, gratitude «fosters a more thriving, resilient, and compassionate society.»
Hara Estroff Marano is an author, journalist and editor who, although not a trained psychologist herself, has been Editor - at - Large of Psychology Today for the past 15 years, in addition to writing for many other publications such as The New York Times and The Smithsonian.
Hara Marano, editor - at - large and the former editor - in - chief of Psychology Today, has been watching a disturbing trend: kids are growing up to be wimps.
The former editor - in - chief of Psychology Today, Dr. Epstein is currently a contributing editor for Scientific American Mind and an occasional lecturer at the Rady School of Management at the University of California San Diego.
I subsequently posed the question in an editorial when I was editor - in - chief of Psychology Today magazine back in 2002.
Ira Hyman of Psychology Today gives us the lowdown: «Cell phones, even when not being used, divide attention... You find yourself thinking about all the things you could be doing with your cell phone.»
About a decade ago, at the request of Psychology Today magazine, I had an amusing debate with Richard Dawkins about testicles.
In his 1967 write - up of his work in the premiere issue of Psychology Today, Milgram shared one particularly riveting anecdote from the first study — that of an envelope that made its way from a wheat farmer in Kansas to the target, a divinity student's wife in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with just two connections.
Robert Epstein, senior research psychologist at the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology in Vista, Calif., is a contributing editor for Scientific American Mind and former editor in chief of Psychology Today.
I was in the library and picked up an issue of Psychology Today and it said that the hardware is always a year or two ahead of the software and it was then that I decided to switch from computer hardware to computer software because they would need people.»
Having a baby adds incredible stress on a marriage, says Hara Estroff Marano, editor at large of Psychology Today.
The February 1974 issue of Psychology Today includes 2 classified advertisements for Primal Therapy under the heading of «Growth Centers.»
Sam Keen is a former Associate Professor of Philosophy and Christian Faith at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary and more recently Director of the Esalen Institute Theological Residence Program and a contributing editor of Psychology Today.

Not exact matches

«The Duchenne smile involves both voluntary and involuntary contraction from two muscles: the zygomatic major (raising the corners of the mouth) and the orbicularis oculi (raising the cheeks and producing crow's feet around the eyes),» according to Adoree Durayappah in Psychology Today.
IBT Education Limited today announced the acquisition of the Australian College of Applied Psychology Pty Ltd for $ 13.1 million, subject to working capital and other adjustments.
Timothy A. Pychyl, a professor of psychology at Canada's Carleton University, has written on Psychology Today, that identity is «knowledge of wpsychology at Canada's Carleton University, has written on Psychology Today, that identity is «knowledge of wPsychology Today, that identity is «knowledge of who we are.
As Albrecht points out in a recent Psychology Today piece, all conversations are composed of three parts — declaratives, questions, and qualifiers.
Ray Williams wrote in Psychology Today, «Goal setting sets up an either - or polarity of success.
Here are 17 of the most useful findings, pulled from Psychology Today, research journals, and a few awesome books.
As much as I respect a lot of the happiness work out there, most of it is either anchored in psychology practice or spirituality, or matters that are a little softer than what today's typical person who prioritizes logic needs to understand.
In fact, they «were 50 percent less likely to engage in prosocial behavior such as volunteering to help customers, listening actively, and making suggestions,» reports Christopher Bergland on Psychology Today (hat tip to Science of Us).
Psychology Today has discussed the importance of rituals to help you transition from work to home.
«Procrastinators actively look for distractions, particularly ones that don't take a lot of commitment on their part,» according to Psychology Today contributor Hara Estroff Marano.
We're neurologically programmed to seek the pleasure or reward of new bite - sized pieces of content provide, which causes us to enter a «dopamine loop,» behavioral psychologist Susan Weinschenk explains in Psychology Today.
«Mehl and his team found that the happiest person in the study had twice as many substantive conversations, and only one - third the amount of small talk, as the unhappiest person,» reports author Jenn Granneman on Psychology Today.
Then check out a this recent article by Judith Orloff, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA, on Psychology Today.
I've covered one or two before, such as WayUp founder Liz Wessel's dictum that young people should always default to «yes,» but if you're in the market for this sort of bite - sized but actionable advice, a recent Psychology Today piece from UConn professor and author Gina Barreca is the real mother lode.
Sam Sommers, a teacher and researcher of social psychology at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, also argues about the power of hello in a blog post on Psycholpsychology at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, also argues about the power of hello in a blog post on PsychologyPsychology Today.
Today Salovey, 55, is Yale's president and a professor of psychology.
In one study, «the number of books «liked» on Facebook profiles was negatively correlated with [psychopathy]-- a finding the authors suggested might indicate that an interest in books contradicts psychopathic tendencies such as thrill seeking, impulsivity, and affect deficiencies,» reports Psychology Today.
Gordon L. Flett, a psychology professor at York University in Toronto, says more than 50 percent of today's Western school - aged children exhibit the perfectionist traits hinted at above.
Then to have spent the next nine years with that outstanding leader, that smart student of psychology, the best manager in baseball today, Joe McCarthy?
Illicit drugs that dump loads of dopamine (or strongly inhibit its reuptake, which is similar to dumping loads of dopamine) include cocaine and methamphetamines,» Dr. Emily Deans wrote at Psychology Today.
Some people are fearful because of something called the spotlight effect, thinking that others are paying more attention to them than they truly are, according to Psychology Today.
Writing for Psychology Today, Preston Ni notes that «disguised hostile humor» is a tell - tale sign of passive aggression.
Today, Price's utopian vision of doing his part for income inequality by making sure all his employees had incomes that would make them happy — or so said the psychology research he read — is looking more than a little shortsighted in the cold light of reality.
If you want to learn how to read the «graphic representation» of human psychology on the charts as mentioned by Al Weiss in his quote above, as well as more about the principles discussed today, checkout my price action trading course and traders community.
Today is definitely not the same world as it was just a few decades ago and the financial industry in particular has embedded extremely high levels of manipulative psychology into their attempts to control us and to keep us passive.
According to the psychology literature, the degree to which people feel connected to their future determines whether they are willing to delay gratification today for the benefit of their future (Hershfield et al. 2009).
A 2010 literature survey in Psychology Today concluded that 87 % to 90 % of employees hate performance reviews because the feedback is not useful, the whole process is stressful, and they're left demotivated as a result.
In an article in 1970 which appeared in Psychology Today, Cox was asked how he reconciled what he said in The Secular City (1965) with what he later wrote in The Feast of Fools (1969).
From «Religion in the Age of Aquarius: A Conversation with Harvey Cox and T. George Harris,» Psychology Today, April 1970, p. 62.
A Psychology Today study showed that millennials are reporting the highest levels of clinical anxiety, stress and depression of any other generation at the same age.
According to Psychology Today, citing an eight - year NIH study, about two of every three alcoholics and addicts relapse within the first year of recovery.
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