Sentences with phrase «psychology professor john»

A study by Kent State University psychology professor John Gunstad recently found that among people who had underwent weight - loss surgery, those with better memory and executive function went on to lose more weight than those with poorer cognitive skills.
Productive arguments, in fact, are one of the things that appear to distinguish couples who stay together from those who split, according to research from several psychologists, including University of Washington psychology professor John Gottman, founder of the Gottman Institute, an organization dedicated to studying and improving relationships.
In Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child, psychology professor John Gottman explores the emotional relationship between parents and children.
UF school psychology Professor John Kranzler has received the 2016 Award for Excellence in Research from Mensa International Ltd..
Observational learning: Psychology professor John O'Doherty will investigate three mechanisms of observational learning: social inference (deducing another person's goals or intentions), action imitation (watching another person and copying their actions), and self - based reinforcement (seeing another person's actions and the resulting rewards and imagining them happening to oneself).
Published this week in the journal PNAS, a research team led by psychology professor John McDonald and doctoral student John Gaspar used EEG technology to determine that while «high - capacity» individuals (those who perform well on memory tasks) are able to suppress distractors, «low - capacity» individuals are unable to suppress them in time to prevent them from grabbing their attention.

Not exact matches

«The»90s have really been the decade of personality testing,» declares John Binning, associate professor of industrial and organizational psychology at Illinois State University in Normal, Ill. «We've seen an incredible resurgence in their usage.»
In 2004, amidst George Bush and John Kerry's heated US presidential election campaign, an Emory University professor of psychology and psychiatry named Drew Westen took MRI pictures of people's brains as they watched video footage of their favorite candidates contradicting themselves.
by John Nofsinger A professor of finance, Nofsinger investigates into the behaviors, psychology influence investors, providing a complete summary on making smart investing decisions for those, who are keen to start their own business.
John M. Vayhinger, B.D., Ph.D. is Professor of Psychology and Pastoral Care, Anderson School of Theology, Anderson, Indiana.
I spoke with John Carton, licensed clinical psychologist and professor of psychology at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta, who assured me that divorce doesn't destine a child from trouble.
«The competition of youth sports is becoming more intense,» says Dr. Mathew Park, assistant professor of sport psychology at John F. Kennedy University in Pleasant Hill, Calif. «Parents are becoming more like fans of professional sports teams than parents.»
John Colombo, PhD, professor of psychology, University of Kansas; associate director of cognitive neuroscience, Schiefelbusch Institute for Lifespan Studies at the University of Kansas, Lawrence.
Clinical Psychologist (USA) Dr Brooke Magnanti Feona Attwood, Professor of Media & Communication at Middlesex University Martin Barker, Emeritus Professor at University of Aberystwyth Jessica Ringrose, Professor, Sociology of Gender and Education, UCL Institute of Education Ronete Cohen MA, Psychologist Dr Meg John Barker, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, The Open University Kath Albury, Associate Professor, UNSW Australia Myles Jackman, specialist in obscenity law Dr Helen Hester, Middlesex University Justin Hancock, youth worker and sex educator Ian Dunt, Editor in Chief, Politics.co.uk Ally Fogg, Journalist Dr Emily Cooper, Northumbria University Gareth May, Journalist Dr Kate Egan, Lecturer in Film Studies, Aberystwyth University Dr Ann Luce, Senior Lecturer in Journalism and Communication, Bournemouth University John Mercer, Reader in Gender and Sexuality, Birmingham City University Dr. William Proctor, Lecturer in Media, Culture and Communication, Bournemouth University Dr Jude Roberts, Teaching Fellow, University of Surrey Dr Debra Ferreday, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Lancaster University Jane Fae, author of «Taming the beast» a review of law / regulation governing online pornography Michael Marshall, Vice President, Merseyside Skeptics Society Martin Robbins, Journalist Assoc. Prof. Paul J. Maginn (University of Western Australia) Dr Lucy Neville, Lecturer in Criminology, Middlesex University Alix Fox, Journalist and Sex Educator Dr Mark McCormack, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Durham University Chris Ashford, Professor of Law and Society, Northumbria University Diane Duke, CEO Free Speech Coalition (USA) Dr Steve Jones, Senior Lecturer in Media, Northumbria University Dr Johnny Walker, Lecturer in Media, Northumbria University
Professor Jim Al - Khalili, President of the BHA Phillip Pullman, author Dan Snow, historian and broadcaster Tim Minchin, musician and writer Dr Simon Singh, science writer Ken Follett, novelist Dr Adam Rutherford, broadcaster and science writer Sir John Sulston FRS, Nobel Prize winning scientist Sir David Smith FRS FRSE, eminent botanist Professor Jonathan Glover, philosopher Professor Anthony Grayling, philosopher Nick Ross, broadcaster CJ De Mooi, actor and professional quizzer Virginia Ironside, writer Professor Steven Rose, scientist and writer Natalie Haynes, comedian and writer Peter Tatchell, human rights campaigner Professor Raymond Tallis FMedSci, physician, philosopher and author Dr Iolo ap Gwynn FRMS, scientist and mountaineer Stephen Volk, screenwriter and author Professor Steve Jones, Professor of Genetics, science writer and broadcaster Sir Terry Pratchett OBE, Fantasy fiction author, satirist Dr Evan Harris, Former Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament and Vice-President of the BHA Dr Richard Bartle, Professor of Computer Game Design Sian Berry, Green campaigner, politician and author Professor John A Lee, Consultant Histopathologist and Professor of Pathology Professor Richard Norman, philosopher Zoe Margolis, author Joan Smith, journalist and author Michael Gore, CVO CBE Derek McAuley, General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches Lorraine Barratt, former member of the Welsh Assembly Dr Susan Blackmore, writer and broadcaster Dr Harry Stopes - Roe, Vice President of the BHA Sir Geoffrey Bindman QC (Hon), human rights lawyer Adele Anderson, actor and singer Dr Helena Cronin, Co-Director, Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Science Professor Alice Roberts, Anatomist, author and broadcaster Professor Chris French, Professor of Psychology, editor of The Skeptic Sir Tom Blundell, scientist Maureen Duffy, poet, playwright and novelist Baroness Whitaker, Labour peer Lord Avebury, Liberal Democrat peer Richard Herring, writer and comedian Martin Rowson, writer and cartoonist Tony Hawks, comedian, writer, musician and philanthropist Peter Cave, philosopher and author Diane Munday, campaigner Professor Norman MacLean, Biologist Professor Sir Harold Kroto FRS, Nobel prize winner, Professor of Chemistry Sir Richard Dalton, former Diplomat Sir David Blatherwick, KCMG, OBE, Diplomat and writer Michael Rubenstein, writer and legal expert Polly Toynbee, columnist and broadcaster Lord O'Neill, labour peer
In the current study, Whitney, along with colleagues John Hinson, WSU professor of psychology, and Hans Van Dongen, director of the WSU Sleep and Performance Research Center at WSU Spokane, compared how people with different variations of the DRD2 gene performed on tasks designed to test both their ability to anticipate events and their cognitive flexibility in response to changing circumstances.
Yet why this is happening remains a mystery, according to Matthew Grizzard, assistant professor of communication and principal investigator of the study published in current issue of the journal Media Psychology, with co-authors Ron Tamborini and John L. Sherry of Michigan State University and René Weber of the University of California Santa Barbara.
John Holland, a professor of psychology and computer science at the University of Michigan, is considered a father of genetic algorithms.
John Annett, professor of psychology at the University of Warwick, speculates that the grunt may be a subconscious attempt by Seles to will her way to success.
«These results support the contention that studies of nutrition and cognition should include more comprehensive and sensitive assessments that are administered multiple times through early childhood,» said John Colombo, study director and KU professor of psychology.
In part 2 of this special Darwin Day podcast, Hofstra University religion professor John Teehan discusses the study of religion from an evolutionary psychology perspective
The Fellows are Consuelo M. De Moraes, professor of entomology; Jainendra K. Jain, Erwin W. Mueller Professor of Physics; John A. Kelmelis, professor of international affairs; Judith Kroll, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Linguistics, and Women's Studies and director of the Center for Language Science; Beverly Lindsay, professor of education, higher education and comparative and international education; Steven J. Schiff, director, Penn State Center for Neural Engineering, Brush Chair Professor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engprofessor of entomology; Jainendra K. Jain, Erwin W. Mueller Professor of Physics; John A. Kelmelis, professor of international affairs; Judith Kroll, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Linguistics, and Women's Studies and director of the Center for Language Science; Beverly Lindsay, professor of education, higher education and comparative and international education; Steven J. Schiff, director, Penn State Center for Neural Engineering, Brush Chair Professor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engProfessor of Physics; John A. Kelmelis, professor of international affairs; Judith Kroll, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Linguistics, and Women's Studies and director of the Center for Language Science; Beverly Lindsay, professor of education, higher education and comparative and international education; Steven J. Schiff, director, Penn State Center for Neural Engineering, Brush Chair Professor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engprofessor of international affairs; Judith Kroll, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Linguistics, and Women's Studies and director of the Center for Language Science; Beverly Lindsay, professor of education, higher education and comparative and international education; Steven J. Schiff, director, Penn State Center for Neural Engineering, Brush Chair Professor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engProfessor of Psychology, Linguistics, and Women's Studies and director of the Center for Language Science; Beverly Lindsay, professor of education, higher education and comparative and international education; Steven J. Schiff, director, Penn State Center for Neural Engineering, Brush Chair Professor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engprofessor of education, higher education and comparative and international education; Steven J. Schiff, director, Penn State Center for Neural Engineering, Brush Chair Professor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engProfessor of Engineering, professor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engprofessor of neurosurgery, engineering science and mechanics, and physics; Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engprofessor of physics and materials science and engineering; and Darrell Velegol, professor of chemical engprofessor of chemical engineering.
Next Page: Patients learn the skill of relaxation [pagebreak] Patients learn the skill of relaxation Without biofeedback, «It's as if your eyes were closed and you were trying to write,» says John Lefebvre, PhD, a psychology professor at Wofford College in Spartanburg, S.C. «The penmanship would be bad, because you don't have all the information you need.
Antipsychotic drugs Some antipsychotic drugs used to treat schizophrenia, the manic symptoms of bipolar disorder, and a growing list of other conditions may also raise your risk of diabetes, says John W. Newcomer, MD, a professor of psychiatry, psychology, and medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
«The gate control theory of pain is one of the predominant theories of pain right now,» says John Lefebvre, PhD, a professor of psychology at Wofford College in Spartanburg, S.C. «If you can shut the gates down, you can eliminate the pain.
More Satisfaction, Less Divorce for People Who Meet Spouses Online ««Meeting online is no longer an anomaly, and the prospects are good,» says lead author John Cacioppo, a professor of social psychology at the University of Chicago.
Around 1990, the Administration for Children and Families decided it would commit substantial funds to hold a biennial conference promoting research for the Head Start Program, and it recruited as organizers John Fantuzzo, professor of human relations at University of Pennsylvania's Graduate School of Education; Catherine Tamis - LeMonda, a professor of applied psychology at New York University's Steinhardt School; and Faith Lamb - Parker, an assistant clinical professor of Population and Family Health at Columbia.
He draws upon the work of Carol S. Dweck, the Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology at Stanford University, Professor John Hattie of Visible Learning and Jo Boaler Professor of Mathematics at the Stanford Graduate School of Education.
Dr. John D. Rich Jr. is an educational psychologist, an associate professor of psychology at Delaware State University, and a father of two boys.
Psychology and computer science professor John Anderson was able to marry ITS engineering to a cognitive science theory for simulating and understanding human cognition.
Featured speakers included Carol Dweck, Lewis and Virginia Eaton professor of psychology at Stanford University and author of «Mindset: The New Psychology of Success,» and John B. King, Jr., the U.S. Secretary of psychology at Stanford University and author of «Mindset: The New Psychology of Success,» and John B. King, Jr., the U.S. Secretary of Psychology of Success,» and John B. King, Jr., the U.S. Secretary of Education.
«I see a lot of problems here,» says John Nofsinger, a finance professor at Washington State University and author of The Psychology of Investing.
«Cats certainly can think,» says Dr. John Wright, a certified animal behaviorist and psychology professor at Mercer University.
John Paul Minda, a psychology professor with the Brain and Mind Institute at the University of Western Ontario, ran a study to measure the program's impact.
According to John C. Norcross, ABPP, a professor of psychology at the University of Scranton, author of Changeology: 5 Steps to Realizing your Goals and Resolutions, «Going public increases accountability and allows for more support.
Oliver John, Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, has been a central figure in the renaissance of personality psychology evident over the last threPsychology at the University of California, Berkeley, has been a central figure in the renaissance of personality psychology evident over the last threpsychology evident over the last three decades.
«You would think that criticism would be the worst,» says lead author John Gottman, PhD, a professor of psychology.
-- John P. Forsyth, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology and faculty director of the Anxiety Disorders Research Program at the University at Albany, SUNY, and author of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Anxiety Disorders and ACT on Life Not on Anger
Regardless of the manner in which you choose to air your differences, having a ratio of 5 - to - 1 where the positive feelings and actions outweigh the negative generally results in a satisfying marriage, according to John Gottman, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington, and his co-author Nan Silver in the «Psychology Today» article «What Makes Marriage Wopsychology at the University of Washington, and his co-author Nan Silver in the «Psychology Today» article «What Makes Marriage WoPsychology Today» article «What Makes Marriage Work?»
Look for common ground instead of focusing on complaints, suggests John Gottman, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington, in his book «The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work.»
Studies by John Gottman (professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington) suggest that while debate crimes such as insult and accusation are bad news, it's not the frequency, length, or intensity of disputes that predict relationship success, but whether you're comfortable with each other's conflict style.
E. Mavis Heatherington, Ph.D., professor of psychology, University of Virginia From the country's foremost relationship expert and «New York Times bestselling author Dr. John M. Gottman comes a powerful, simple five - step program, based on twenty years of innovative research, for greatly improving all of the relationships in your life — with spouses and lovers, children, siblings, and even your colleagues at work.
In 2004, amidst George Bush and John Kerry's heated US presidential election campaign, an Emory University professor of psychology and psychiatry named Drew Westen took MRI pictures of people's brains as they watched video footage of their favorite candidates contradicting themselves.
My wife is a psychologist and psychology professor and John Gottman is her absolute favorite relationship and family psychologist.
John Gottman, Ph.D, is a leading research scientist on marriage and family, emeritus professor of psychology at the University of Washington, executive director of his laboratory, the Relationship Research Institute, and cofounder of the Gottman Institute.
John Mordecai Gottman (born April 26, 1942) is a professor emeritus in psychology.
A six - year study of newly married couples by psychology professor Dr John Gottman found that the way they argued actually predicted whether they would stay together.
«A couple that bickers but can resolve their conflicts actually has an increased chance of maintaining a long - lasting relationship than a couple that does not bicker at all,» John Gottman, a professor of psychology focusing on marital stability, told Psycholpsychology focusing on marital stability, told PsychologyPsychology Today.
John M. Gottman, PhD, is a New York Times bestselling author and a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington in Seattle.
The Seven Principles For Making Marriage Work (John Gottman and Nan Silver) John Gottman is a professor of psychology and the founder and director of the Seattle Marital and Family Institute.
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