So Motyl and Skitka also set out to compare papers in four major
psychology journals published in 2003 and 2004 with the same number of studies published 10 years later, in 2013 and 2014.
Not exact matches
A study on waiters and tipping
published in the
Journal of Applied Social
Psychology demonstrates how even tiny gifts can make a big difference, finding that: «Customers who received a small piece of chocolate along with [their] check tipped more than did customers who received no candy.»
Researchers who
published in the
Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology found that a request was more likely to be granted if it was asked for in the beginning of a conversation, as opposed to the end of it.
Entrepreneurs tend to be an action - oriented, onwards - and - upwards lot — a longitudinal study
published by the
Journal of Economic
Psychology in 2014 associated successful entrepreneurs with higher - than - normal levels of hardiness, resourcefulness and optimism — meaning that when their venture fails, there's a pretty good chance they'll be able to rebound quickly, with a nifty second - act tale of adversity to slot into their narrative.
A recent study in Sweden titled «The relation between office type and workplace conflict: A gender and noise perspective» and
published in the
Journal of Environmental
Psychology, looked at the data of 5,229 employees who participated in the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey of Health.
The study, which was
published in the September issue of
Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology, also indicated that one's perception of available time led powerful people to be, in general, less stressed.
Meanwhile, a 2017 study
published in the
journal Frontiers in
Psychology found that listening to music increased risk - taking behavior in athletic performance, especially in men.
Even if you have the willpower to ignore the constant tones and alert lights in the background, the sound can still impair your concentration, according to a study
published in the
Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Human Perception and Performance.
In the paper, which was
published in the
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, the researchers said that those who asked for a range were more likely to get their reservation price than if they gave a single offer.
The researchers, who
published their finding in the
journal, Health
Psychology, found that women rated healthy dishes more favorably when they prepared the food themselves.
A study
published in the
journal Health
Psychology has some dead simple advice for anyone hoping to finally make that new, healthy habit stick.
A study
published in the «
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology» compared how students performed on a test to how they thought they did.
«People have a false assumption that they're more productive working as a group than individually, even though all evidence shows it's the opposite,» explains Nicholas Kohn, co-author of the University of Texas study,
published in the
journal Applied Cognitive
Psychology.
In a study
published in The European
Journal of Social
Psychology, students who wrote out self - advice using «you» not only completed more problems but said they would be happier to work on more in the future compared with students who used «I.» The researchers speculated this is because second - person self - talk may trigger memories of receiving support and encouragement from parents and teachers in childhood.
To make it even easier, it appears that self - affirmation can help you have more self - control when you're running out, according to a study
published in the
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology.
However, a recent study,
published in the
Journal of Business and
Psychology, has found there is a caveat to this «beauty premium.»
One study
published in the
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology found that participants demonstrated reduced self - control — less physical stamina, reduced persistence in the face of failure and more procrastination — after making several decisions about what types of goods to buy.
Indeed, Business Insider previously reported that a 2015 study
published in the
journal Psychology and Aging found that quantity of relationships was more important for people in their 20s, but quality of relationships was more important once people hit their 30s.
That's the suggestion of new research
published in the
Journal of Experimental
Psychology.
A study
published in the
Journal of Social
Psychology in 2013 found just that.
In 2007, a paper
published in the
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology described perseverance and passion for long - term goals as «Grit» (a non-cognitive trait that measured persistence), and rated it of equal or greater value than IQ and talent.
By measuring the dilation of their pupils — an indicator of sexual arousal, as proven by a previous study of his
published in the
Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, Savin - Williams and his team were able to conclude that women were aroused by pornography featuring women with men and women with women.
Rude behavior is contagious and can spread quickly throughout the workplace, according to the study
published in the
Journal of Applied
Psychology in June.
Meanwhile, a 2008 study
published in the
Journal of Applied
Psychology found that, in mock interviews, students who had a firmer handshake at the beginning of the interview were ultimately perceived as more hireable.
«Very unattractive» participants earned significantly more than those who were considered attractive, according to a study
published in the
Journal of Business and
Psychology.
If you're getting a business off the ground, you may think that pulling all - nighters or always being on call will inspire confidence in your employees, but that lack of sleep really just makes you less of a charismatic leader, according to a recent study
published in the
Journal of Applied
Psychology.
Perhaps most convincing of all, a meta - analysis of 99 data sets from 95 studies conducted between 1962 - 2011
published in the
Journal of Applied
Psychology, similarly found that female leaders were rated by their reports, peers and managers as being just as or even more effective than male leaders.
According to Harvard Business Review, «research first
published in the
Journal of Applied
Psychology shows that even when the minority points of view are wrong, they cause the rest of the group to think better, to create more solutions, and to improve the creativity of problem - solving.»
He has also conducted and
published extensive research on the
psychology behind sports fandom, which was featured in the sports industry's leading business
journal and multiple sports business blogs.
Shawn's research has been
published in the top
psychology journal for work he did at UBS in partnership with Yale University to transform how stress impacts the body, and he recently did a two - hour interview with Oprah at her house to discuss his mission to bring positive
psychology to the world.
Dr. Loughlin has
published empirical papers in the
Journal of Experimental
Psychology, the
Journal of Organizational Behavior, the
Journal of Applied
Psychology, and the
Journal of Occupational and Organisational
Psychology, as well as co-authoring book chapters on work stress, workplace health and safety, and the quality of youth employment (several of these publications have been with her students).
^ 2: This type of research is more likely to be
published in
journals of Trans - Personal
Psychology, and Humanistic
Psychology, than any other field of endeavor.
but fortunately there are psychologists, mental health practitioners and others who do and I have benefitted greatly from their work, personal testimonies and the various articles / publications which they have produced --(for example, The
Journal of Transpersonal
Psychology; The Religious & Spiritual Problems category in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (DSM - IV)
published by the American Psychiatric Association; The US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health PubMed.gov database of healthcare and scientific literature)-- about the adverse psychological effects which can arise when persons engage in intense / deep spiritual practices such as intense / deep prayer, fasting and meditation which alter their state of consciousness.
A recent study
published in the
journal Sage Open led by San Diego State University
psychology professor Jean Twenge found that in 2014, belief in God was at an «all - time low» in America.
A recent study
published in the
journal Sage Open led by San Diego State University
psychology professor Jean Twenge found that...
In an article
published last year in the
journal Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, the researchers concluded:
For a fine exposition of the process - relational vision, appropriating the insights of
psychology, and concrete in its orientation, dealing with the issues of death and dying, loss and bereavement, see Kinast, Robert L., When a Person Dies: Pastoral Theology in Death Experiences (New York: The Crossroad
Publishing Company, 1984); also by the same author, an excellent delineation of the major tenets of process thought and process theology in particular, is «A Process Model of Theological Reflection» The
Journal of Pastoral Care 37 (June, 1983), pp. 144 - 156.
(Lest my own testimony be suspected, I will quote another reporter, Dr. H.H. Goddard, of Clark University, whose thesis on «the Effects of Mind on Body as evidenced by Faith Cures» is
published in the American
Journal of
Psychology for 1899 (vol.
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.
A study by psychologist John Gottman
published in 2000 in the
Journal of Family
Psychology found that as many as two - thirds of couples experience a significant decline in marriage satisfaction, including less - frequent or less - satisfying sex, more conflict and more emotional distance, after the first baby arrives.
One study,
published in the
Journal of Family
Psychology in November, 2016, examined the link between parenting styles and inflammation and immune activation in kids, which are risk factors for later illness.
The study, which was
published online in the October, 2016 issue of the
Journal of Consumer
Psychology, found that authoritative parenting led to the best health and development outcomes for kids, according to co-author Les Carlson, PhD, professor of marketing at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln.
A study
published a few years ago in the
journal Frontiers in
Psychology shows that when moms breathe in the smell of their own newborns, it releases a reward - seeking response in the brain.
Whiteside and Becker, in the March 2000
Journal of Family
Psychology, reviewed 131 articles
published from 1970 to 1941 on the effects of divorce on children under age 5, and found that 106 of them did not include information on fathers or on co-parenting between divorced mothers and fathers.
It was so controversial that a report disputing it, written by Professors Richard Warshak and Linda Nielsen and endorsed by 110 child care specialists, was
published in the
journal «
Psychology, Public Policy and Law».
A counterintuitive and interesting study was
published in the
Journal of Family
Psychology about what helps and what hurts in talking to your teens about sex.
The study,
published in the
Journal of Applied Sport
Psychology, found that high achievement goals were linked to higher levels of worry.
According to a study
published in the March issue of the
Journal of Family
Psychology, one of the worst natural disasters to ever hit the United States — Hurricane Hugo — caused a significant increase in divorces, marriages and births among the residents of South Carolina who were the hardest hit by the brutal storm.
We think that may be part of what's going on here,» said Ben Karney, professor of social
psychology at UCLA and co-author on the study, which was published in the May edition of the Journal of Family P
psychology at UCLA and co-author on the study, which was
published in the May edition of the
Journal of Family
PsychologyPsychology.
Between juggling kids, career, housework and husband, it would seem the life of a working mom would make for a strained marriage, but the opposite may be true, according to a recent study
published in the
Journal of Family
Psychology.