Not exact matches
This conclusion, along with «men are more likely than women to seek unusual and new foods,» results from a study done in 1988 by Drs. Thomas R. Alley and W. Jeffrey Burroughs of the
Department of
Psychology, Clemson University, and
published in the Journal of General
Psychology in 1991.
In 1981, when Elkind's book The Hurried Child was first
published, I was a preschool teacher at Bing Nursery School, the laboratory preschool for the
Psychology Department at Stanford University.
In a new study
published in the scientific journal JAMA Psychiatry, researchers from the
Department of
Psychology at Uppsala University show that individuals with social phobia make too much serotonin.
This is the take - home message from a new study
published online in PLOS ONE by a team of researchers including Arthur Aron, PhD, a Research Professor in the
Department of
Psychology at Stony Brook University.
In late August, three young researchers under Stapel's supervision had found irregularities in
published data and notified the head of the social -
psychology department, Marcel Zeelenberg.
In a study
published in EBioMedicine, a group of researchers at Uppsala University's
Department of
Psychology, Sweden, now demonstrate considerably better effects of the SSRI escitalopram when given with correct as compared to incorrect verbal information.
The study,
published in the journal Psychological Science, was led by Johannes Eichstaedt, a graduate student in the School of Arts & Science's
Department of
Psychology, and included H. Andrew Schwartz, a visiting assistant professor in the School of Engineering and Applied Science's
Department of Computer and Information Science; Margaret Kern, an assistant professor at the University of Melbourne, Australia; Gregory Park, a postdoctoral fellow in the School of Arts and Science's
Department of
Psychology; and director Martin Seligman, both of the Positive
Psychology Center, as well as Lyle Ungar, a professor of computer and information science.
The study,
published in the journal Intelligence, was co-led by Dr David Hugh - Jones, from UEA's School of Economics, and Dr Abdel Abdellaoui, of the
Department of Biological
Psychology at VU University in The Netherlands.
Sackler faculty members Prof. Moshe Rehavi of the
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology and Dr. Metsada Pasmnik - Chor of the Bioinformatics Unit were coauthors of the study,
published in Translational
Psychology.
«It's a growing problem and I think it's going to get worse,» says Larry Roberts of McMaster's
Department of
Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour, the only Canadian author of a paper
published this week in the journal Scientific Reports.
In a preliminary study
published in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental
Psychology, researchers from the
Department of
Psychology at Cambridge found an association between high body mass index (BMI) and poorer performance on a test of episodic memory.
In a study
published today in the Journal of Comparative
Psychology, scientists at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and the
Department for General
Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience (Institute of
Psychology) at Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, investigated this question and found evidence that dogs create a «mental representation» of the target when they track a scent trail.
The study, which was
published in the Journal of Experimental
Psychology, was undertaken by Dr. Arik Cheshin from the
Department of Human Services at the University of Haifa, together with an international team of researchers from the United States and the Netherlands, headed by Prof. Peter Kim of the University of Southern California.
Results of the study, which was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the
Department of Veterans Affairs, are being
published in the journal
Psychology and Aging.
The study by the University of Warwick's
Department of
Psychology,
published in PLoS One, found that sleep was a worthy target for treating chronic pain and not only as an answer to pain - related insomnia.
The new research, led by Irene Blair, an associate professor in CU - Boulder's
Department of
Psychology and Neuroscience, is
published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Markus Boeckle and Nicola Clayton of the University of Cambridge
Department of
Psychology wrote an «Insights» commentary, also
published in Science, concerning the new discoveries about ravens.
In a study
published in Nature Neuroscience, Tali Sharot from the
department of experimental
psychology at University College London and her colleagues devised a clever study to test people's dishonest tendencies while scanning their brains in an fMRI machine.