Stephen Casner,
a research psychologist in NASA's Human Systems Integration Division, puts it more bluntly: «News flash: Cars in 2017 equal airplanes in 1983.»
The research was led by Lisa Uebelacker, PhD,
a research psychologist in the Psychosocial Research Department at Butler Hospital, a Care New England hospital, and an associate professor of psychiatry and human behavior at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.
Not exact matches
The fascinating
research led by University of California, San Francisco
psychologist Erika Siegel and recently published
in Psychological Science, tested how our mood affects our perception of faces.
That was the message of a talk by Dr. Miriam Tatzel at the American Psychological Association's 122nd annual convention, which was held recently
in Washington, D.C. Presenting her
research to the assembled
psychologists, Tatzel stressed the importance of playing down consumerism as a route to fulfillment and boiled down the
research on the subject into a handful of scientifically validated principles to follow for greater happiness.
That's according to
research into a «co-rumination» conducted by
psychologists and written up
in Quartz recently.
But according to new
research out of Yale and recently published
in American
Psychologist, this common intuition just might be wrong when it comes to understanding what others are really feeling.
Based on
research by Dr. Robert Cialdini, a leading social
psychologist, it turns out that because of the sheer magnitude of information you have to take
in every day, your brain has developed 6 shortcuts to help you make decisions.
In a related development in 2008, a group of psychologists concluded in a research paper that a sense of purpose and direction prolongs life and we can see evidence of this in our DNA — specifically our telomere
In a related development
in 2008, a group of psychologists concluded in a research paper that a sense of purpose and direction prolongs life and we can see evidence of this in our DNA — specifically our telomere
in 2008, a group of
psychologists concluded
in a research paper that a sense of purpose and direction prolongs life and we can see evidence of this in our DNA — specifically our telomere
in a
research paper that a sense of purpose and direction prolongs life and we can see evidence of this
in our DNA — specifically our telomere
in our DNA — specifically our telomeres.
There is an interesting empirical
research by
psychologist in the European Journal of Social Psychology that explores the relationship between passion and self - esteem.
In the spring of 2013,
research conducted by
psychologists at Cambridge University blew the lid off how this easily accessible digital record of your behaviour can be used (ultimately without your consent) to extract sensitive personal information about you — the kind of information that you might not even share with your closest friends.
In Mindset, psychologist Carol Dweck argues, based on decades of research, that how we see ourselves is a major factor in what we can achiev
In Mindset,
psychologist Carol Dweck argues, based on decades of
research, that how we see ourselves is a major factor
in what we can achiev
in what we can achieve.
The app created by Kogan
in 2014 offered a personality prediction and billed itself on Facebook as «a
research app used by
psychologists.»
A Cambridge University professor working for Cambridge Analytica
in 2014 created an app, called Thisisyourdigitallife, that offered personality predictions and billed itself on Facebook as «a
research app used by
psychologists.»
On the other hand, new
research from
psychologist Kathleen D. Vohs, discussed
in «What a Messy Desk Says About You,» suggests that surroundings that are too neat can inhibit
in some ways:
I'm not a
psychologist, and am not up to the minute on the
research in this field, but the last time I checked, being gay had not been proven as a genetic condition.
In a survey of two thousand research psychologists conducted in 2011, over half of those surveyed admitted outright to selectively reporting those experiments which gave the result they were afte
In a survey of two thousand
research psychologists conducted
in 2011, over half of those surveyed admitted outright to selectively reporting those experiments which gave the result they were afte
in 2011, over half of those surveyed admitted outright to selectively reporting those experiments which gave the result they were after.
The groundbreaking work that Daniel Patrick Moynihan did
in 1965, on the black family, is an example — along with the critical
research of
psychologist Judith Wallerstein over several decades on the impact of divorce on children; Barbara Dafoe Whitehead's well - known work on the outcomes of single parenthood for children; Sara McLanahan and Gary Sandefur's seminal book, Growing Up with a Single Parent; and David Blankenhorn's Fatherless America, another lengthy summarization of the bad empirical news about family breakup.
The internist is equipped to treat the physiological problems and administer Antabuse; the
psychologist is trained to do testing through which the alcoholic's therapeutic needs can be evaluated, and he may be trained to do
research and psychotherapy; the psychiatrist, being a medical doctor like the internist, can prescribe medication, but his unique skills are
in the area of individual and group therapy and their relationship to drug therapies; the social worker may be trained to help the alcoholic work through his marital and vocational problems and do group as well as individual therapy; the social worker may also work with spouses; the pastoral counselor is specially equipped by training to help the alcoholic with his «spiritual» problems as these relate to his sobriety and his interpersonal relationships; he may also be trained to do group and marital counseling; 40.
Practically,
psychologists, statisticians, and the rest of the
research teams must be involved
in these
research designs, but the hidden goals and preconceptions of both clergymen and psychologically trained professionals must be articulated before the designs are firmed up.
The article recounts how an ambitious team of
research psychologists undertook to study the entire group of children born
in 1955 on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, beginning with prenatal histories taken from the mothers and following up on each child's development at ages one, two, ten, eighteen, and again at thirty - one or thirty - two.
The late Carney Landis, from the perspective of a
research psychologist, wrote: «If there is any human disorder which can be truly said to be of multiple etiology, it is alcoholism
in all its diverse forms.»
«I think we are hard - wired to release our compassionate care when we see signs of vulnerability,» said Stephanie Brown, a
psychologist researching neurological links between motherhood and altruism at Stony Brook University
in New York.
Atran and social
psychologist Jeremy Ginges co-authored a study
in the journal Science on the need for more scientific
research into religion.
These questions are the same as those to which we have addressed ourselves
in a five - year National Institute of Mental Health
Research and Training Project for the training of clergymen
in the field of alcoholism conducted at the Georgian Clinic (1964 - 69)(«Pilot Project for Clinical Training of Clergymen
in The Field of Alcoholism» NIMH Grant # 8589, staffed by: George P. Dominick, Co-Director; John M. Crow, Coordinator of Training; Melvin B. Drurker, Clinical
Psychologist for Evaluation.)
And yet neuroscientists,
psychologists, and other researchers have begun to focus on a new and different set of causes for the problems of children who grow up
in adversity, and their
research is recalibrating how we think about disadvantage and opportunity.
In the 1960s, psychologist Diana Baumrind wrote a groundbreaking paper based upon her research in which she detailed three types of parenting styles she observed: authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative parentin
In the 1960s,
psychologist Diana Baumrind wrote a groundbreaking paper based upon her
research in which she detailed three types of parenting styles she observed: authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative parentin
in which she detailed three types of parenting styles she observed: authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative parenting.
In cross-cultural research by Ian St. James - Roberts, a child psychologist at the University of London, and several researchers in England and Denmark, studies of parenting techniques from around the world found no significant differences between the occurrence and persistence of colic and parenting style
In cross-cultural
research by Ian St. James - Roberts, a child
psychologist at the University of London, and several researchers
in England and Denmark, studies of parenting techniques from around the world found no significant differences between the occurrence and persistence of colic and parenting style
in England and Denmark, studies of parenting techniques from around the world found no significant differences between the occurrence and persistence of colic and parenting styles.
Attachment parenting is merely a term coined much later to tie these natural parenting choices and others
in with the modern
research of
psychologists like John Bowlby who found that the healthiest emotional and relational adults tended to have strong early attachments with a parent or primary caregiver.
In the first of this three - part series, guest contributor Dr. Amanda Gummer, a research psychologist who specializes in child development, provides informational and practical tips for bonding with your newborn bab
In the first of this three - part series, guest contributor Dr. Amanda Gummer, a
research psychologist who specializes
in child development, provides informational and practical tips for bonding with your newborn bab
in child development, provides informational and practical tips for bonding with your newborn baby.
We eradicate stigma by increasing the availability and accessibility of mental health care worldwide by: treating patients, training professionals, including
psychologists, therapists, OBGYNs, pediatricians, nurses, and midwives, providing public programs, including new parent groups, breastfeeding clinics, and adolescent services, funding
research, providing curated content online, and advocating
in public and private sectors.
He is actively engaged
in developing
research in novel attachment - and lactation - promoting interventions through his international network of family practitioners, midwives, obstetricians, pediatricians and child
psychologists.
The Use — and Abuse — of Attachment
Research in Family Courts by American
psychologist Peter Haiman
Dr. Coleman is a
psychologist in private practice
in the San Francisco Bay Area and Co-Chair of the Council on Contemporary Families, a non-partisan organization composed of leading sociologists, historians,
psychologists and demographers dedicated to providing the press and public with the latest
research and best - practice findings about American families.
The neuroscientific
research tells us that when kids are
in early environments that are responsive, interactive, and warm and stable, and involve what
psychologists sometimes call «serve and return» parenting, which involves face - to - face, back - and - forth interactions between parents and their babies, that creates secure attachment — a real sense of security that kids have with parents or other caregivers.
Dr. Sue Johnson, the bestselling author of Hold Me Tight and Love Sense (2014), is a clinical
psychologist and Distinguished
Research Professor at Alliant International University
in San Diego, CA.
The clinical
psychologist who led the
research found that kids with pre-psychopathic traits were less engaged with images of others
in distress than kids without those traits.
Attachment theory stems from
psychologist John Bowlby's studies of maternal deprivation and animal behavior
research in the early 1950s.
According to
research by James Prescott, a developmental neuropsychologist and cross cultural
psychologist, «vestibular - cerebellar stimulation (which happens when we carry our babies) is the most important sensory system for the development of «basic trust»
in the affectional bonding between mother and infant.
In fact,
research -
psychologists Lawrence A. Kudek and John Gottman maintain that our satisfaction with our partners is tied to how well we resolve conflicts with them and how effectively we manage the negative fallout of disagreements on our relationships and on us individually.
As I like to do when something parenting - related (or
in this case, my child) is nagging me, I did some
research and called a handful of child
psychologists.
Harlow's work, as well as important
research by
psychologists John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth, helped influence key changes
in how orphanages, adoption agencies, social services groups, and child care providers approached the care of children.
Bowlby, an English psychiatrist, and Ainsworth, an American
psychologist, have conducted some of the most extensive field
research in mother - infant interactions.
As a
research psychologist specialising
in child development, Amanda's work spans corporate, government and charity sectors through which she promotes the value of play and positive parenting
in child development to a variety of audiences.
Research that began with the late
psychologist John Bowlby's Attachment Theory back
in the 1950s has shown the critical need for consistently loving, sensitive responsiveness to develop a secure parent - child attachment — that component that forms the foundation of how our babies and toddlers go on to relate to others...
in all relationships... through the rest of their lives.
In the 1960s, University of California
research psychologist Diana Baumrind developed a classification of parenting styles that some developmental
psychologists still use today: authoritative, authoritarian, permissive, and uninvolved.
Back
in the sixties, when
psychologist Diana Baumrind
researched parenting styles, based on a study of over 100 preschool - age children, she identified three basic parenting styles.
In her 1970s
research,
psychologist Mary Ainsworth expanded greatly upon Bowlby's original work.
During her time
in England, Ainsworth worked at the Tavistock Clinic with
psychologist John Bowlby, where she
researched maternal - infant attachments.
Started
in 1987 by
psychologist Paul Cameron, the Family
Research Institute (FRI) has become the anti-gay movement's main source for what Cameron claims is «cutting - edge research» — but is, in fact, completely discredited junk science pushed out by a man who has been condemned by three professional organi
Research Institute (FRI) has become the anti-gay movement's main source for what Cameron claims is «cutting - edge
research» — but is, in fact, completely discredited junk science pushed out by a man who has been condemned by three professional organi
research» — but is,
in fact, completely discredited junk science pushed out by a man who has been condemned by three professional organizations.
A Cambridge University professor working for Cambridge Analytica
in 2014 created an app, called Thisisyourdigitallife, that offered personality predictions and billed itself on Facebook as «a
research app used by
psychologists.»