In addition to offering a complimentary membership to non-millionaires, Millionaire's Club works closely
with a leading psychologist, relationship counselor, date coach, hypnotherapist, and image consultant, as well as with a variety of top - notch personal trainers, plastic surgeons, dentists, and hairstylists.
Not exact matches
According to research
led by University of Michigan
psychologist Ethan Kross, Ph.D., using either your first name or the pronoun «you» instead of «I» can make it easier to deal
with stressful experiences.
As the
leading psychologist on the topic Carol Dweck puts it, «In a growth mindset, people believe their most basic abilities can be developed through dedication and hard work — brains and talent are just the starting point,» whereas people
with a fixed mindset believe «their basic qualities, like intelligence are fixed.»
According to research by
leading positive
psychologist Barbara Fredrickson
with the University of North Carolina, a positive outlook generates creative thinking, builds self - confidence and promotes overall resilience — all qualities necessary for lasting lifestyle changes.
In a review co-authored in 2011 by Yale
psychologist June Gruber, researchers found that the pursuit of happiness can actually
lead to negative outcomes — not because surrounding yourself
with positive people, mastering a skill, smiling, getting therapy or practicing self - governance aren't conducive to happiness, in and of themselves, but because «when you're doing it
with the motivation or expectation that these things ought to make you happy, that can
lead to disappointment and decreased happiness.»
Psychologist Susan David says the way in which we deal
with our emotions drives «every aspect of how we love, how we live, how we parent and how we
lead.»
According to a University of Iowa study on brain activity
led by physiological
psychologist Debra L. Johnson, introvert brains show more activity in areas dealing
with learning and planning, while extrovert brains are more active in regions that control sensory processes, like watching and listening.
A few weeks after my trip to Queens, I visited the Stress Neurobiology and Prevention lab at the University of Oregon in Eugene, where a team of researchers
led by Phil Fisher, a
psychologist, has developed a series of interventions
with parents that in many ways parallel the ABC program, though
with one major difference: They use digital video as a teaching tool to help steer parents away from behaviors that cause fear and stress in children and toward patterns that promote attachment and self - regulation.
«Kids» fears tend to grow along
with their imaginations and because older children can think of bad things happening to their parents or themselves, this sometimes
leads to new or increased clinginess,» explains Dr. Eileen Kennedy - Moore, a
psychologist and the author of «Smart Parenting for Smart Kids.»
BabyBjorn works
with leading pediatricians, midwives and child
psychologists.
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 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.
In Raising Cain, Michael Thompson and collaborator Dan Kindlon, Ph.D., two of the country's
leading child
psychologists, share what they have learned in decades of combined experience working
with boys and their families.
We work
with leading pediatricians, midwives and child
psychologists.
Psychologists believe that the
leading reason why children develop attachment disorder is that of their relationship
with their parents.
If ADHD runs in the family, if your child is also overly aggressive and it is
leading to problems
with his relationships
with other children, or if his behavior is extreme and very different from all of the other preschoolers at his age, then you might seek further evaluation by a child
psychologist or your pediatrician.
So a team
led by John Wixted, a
psychologist at the University of California (UC), San Diego, ran an experiment
with the robbery division of the Houston Police Department in Texas.
What's more, work
with animals has
led to the idea that personality traits evolve to help individuals survive in a wider variety of ecological niches, and this is influencing the way
psychologists think about human personality.
But Cary Funk, a social
psychologist at Pew who helped
lead that 2016 survey, says those findings «are broadly in keeping»
with the new survey, again underscoring the nuances.
So a team
led by Yi - Yuan Tang of the Dalian University of Technology in north - east China teamed up
with psychologist Michael Posner of the University of Oregon, Eugene, to put a meditative technique called integrated body - mind training (IBMT) to a controlled test.
Each therapy session consisted of participants viewing a film
with themes of alcohol dependence, such as Leaving Las Vegas and When a Man Loves a Woman, followed by a one - hour discussion
led by a
psychologist.
««Stereotypes associating science
with men are found across the world, even in supposedly gender - equal nations,» says the study's
lead author, David Miller, a
psychologist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.»
Another important finding from the study was that patients reported that they wanted their talking therapy to be on a one - to - one basis
with a
psychologist, which contrasts
with current trends of introducing psychology group as a group activity
led by physiotherapists.
Lead author Timothy Wilson, a University of Virginia
psychologist, says that
with smartphones, tablets and TVs within reach anytime, many of us may not know what to do when we have time to ponder without distraction — but the electric shock results were still surprising.
Psychologists hope that a deeper understanding of how our left and right hands cooperate will
lead to the development of intuitive two - handed user interfaces that give us more control over computers than the mouse we use
with one hand today.
So far, Kiehl has assessed more than 5,000 brains and found that psychopaths have functional and structural anomalies that affect emotions, impulse control and cognition,
leading him to view psychopathy as a neurodevelopmental disorder — a belief he shares
with a number of other researchers and
psychologists.
Led by UC Berkeley
psychologist Stephen Hinshaw, BGALS has consistently found that — unlike boys, whose symptoms are more overt — girls
with ADHD suffer in hidden ways, and are more likely to internalize struggles as they mature into adolescence and young adulthood.
«Based on our research criteria, parents report that the girls in our study
with autism seem to have a more difficult time
with day - to - day skills than the boys,» says Allison Ratto, Ph.D.,
lead author of the study and a clinical
psychologist within the Center for Autism Spectrum Disorders at Children's National.
To create the model, a team
led by Kurt Gray, a
psychologist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and David Rand, a
psychologist at Yale University, started
with dozens of identical virtual «agents,» representing people, that repeatedly interact
with each other.
«In our study, transgender youth decided to pursue fertility preservation at much lower rates than we would have expected from research on reproductive desires of transgender adults, which suggests that about half want biological children and over a third would have considered preserving their fertility if techniques had been available and offered to them,» said
lead author Diane Chen, PhD, a pediatric
psychologist with the Gender & Sex Development Program at Lurie Children's and in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
Psychologist Jerry Bubrick
leads off the section
with his account of helping several young patients overcome anxiety in «New Therapy Helps Children Wallop Their Worries.»
«What we found early on was not all mice will mate
with each other,» says clinical
psychologist Melissa Farmer, who
led the study while earning her Ph.D. at McGill University in Montreal, Canada.
In Pansy's case, zookeepers decided to allow the other chimps to stay
with her as she died, while a research team,
led by
psychologist James Anderson of the nearby University of Stirling, observed their reactions.
The study was
led by
psychologists from the University of Lincoln, UK, working
with researchers from Queen Mary University, University College Cork, University of East London, Imperial College London, and AUT University in New Zealand.
«Our findings showed that an in increase in methylation of the SKA2 gene is associated
with decreased cortical thickness in the prefrontal cortex, which may play a role in the development of PTSD and may explain why this gene predicts risk for mental health problems, like PTSD and suicide,» explained
lead and corresponding author Naomi Samimi Sadeh, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry at BUSM and a
psychologist in the National Center for PTSD at VA Boston.
Female academics face several challenges that their male colleagues don't, says
lead author Joyce Benenson, a
psychologist at Emmanuel College in Boston (who co-authored the paper
with Richard Wrangham, a full professor at Harvard University where Berenson worked previously as junior faculty).
In a 2009 study a team
led by
psychologist Aaron L. Pincus of Pennsylvania State University associated features of pathological narcissism
with suicide attempts.
In 2005, for example, a group
led by
psychologist Sarah Brosnan of Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta reported that capuchin monkeys refused to exchange tokens
with an experimenter for a cucumber if they saw a fellow monkey receiving a more desirable grape for its «money.»
Led by Columbia University
psychologist Betsy Sparrow, the researchers conducted a series of experiments whose results suggest that when people are faced
with difficult questions, they are likely to think that the Internet will help them find the answers.
In another study, using four data sets
with sample sizes in the thousands, a team of researchers
led by the University of Minnesota
psychologist Paul Sackett investigated the relationship between cognitive ability and both academic and work performance.
Around 30 years ago, work by
psychologists and neuroscientists began to show that our memories are easily suggestible,
with the implication that
leading questioning could implant false details, or even completely fictitious events, in the minds of eyewitnesses.
«But we really need a larger sample to be more confident in our findings,» says educational
psychologist Kimberly Sheridan of George Mason University, who
led the experiment together
with Abigail Konopasky of the same institution.
University of Illinois professor of psychology Renée Baillargeon, who
led the new study
with graduate student Peipei Setoh, said that many
psychologists have theorized that babies are born
with core physical and psychological frameworks that help them navigate the world.
In The Telomere Effect: A Revolutionary Approach to Living Younger, Healthier, Longer, Blackburn — together
with co-author Elissa Epel, a
leading health
psychologist at the University of California San Francisco who studies stress, aging, and obesity — outlines how the length and maintenance of one's telomeres provide a biological basis for bettering health.
A team
led by
psychologist Kirk Erickson at the University of Pittsburgh tried to find out whether the same held true for humans, and in 2009 were able to prove that a higher level of cardiovascular fitness in older adults was associated
with a larger hippocampus.
[People
with social anxiety] worry that their behavior will humiliate or embarrass themselves, offend others, and
lead to rejection,» New York City - based clinical
psychologist Ben Michaelis, PhD, explained to Health in a previous interview.
«Supportive group treatments
led by a skilled counselor
with others quitting at the same time are influential,» says Jodi Prochaska, PhD, MPH, a clinical
psychologist and assistant professor at the University of California, San Francisco, who works at the universitys Center for Tobacco Control Research & Education.
Traditionally, cognitive behavioral therapists have helped people process unresolved trauma, but more recently psychiatrists,
psychologists, clinical social workers — many working
with US military veterans — acknowledge that embodiment practices such as yoga enriched
with mindfulness practices can have more impact in alleviating the symptoms that
lead to both reactive behaviors and stress related disease.
What: Support group
lead by a Clinical
Psychologist / Parenting Expert
with a focus on managing stress and anxiety in the home
with the goal of raising happy, well - adjusted kids.
Designed
with the help of
psychologists and
leading experts in the field of matchmaking, our two - part Smart Profiling system aims to understand who you are and what you're looking for in a partner.