Personalities Don’t Usually Change Quickly but They May Have During the Pandemic

The global coronavirus pandemic disrupted almost everything about our lives, from how we work and go to school, to how we socialize (Zoom happy hours, anyone?!), and ultimately strained trust in many of the overarching systems we depend on, from health care to government. New research suggests it may have changed Americans’ personalities, too, and […]

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Patients Believe in Psychotherapy More When Practitioners Demonstrate Warmth and Competence 

Therapy is a collaborative process informed not just by a practitioner’s expertise but also by the patient’s expectations about that expertise and how likely they are to benefit from it. Research in Clinical Psychological Science suggests that therapists who demonstrate both warmth and competence can shape those expectations by inspiring more positive beliefs about the

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Apply for A National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowship

The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has issued a call for applications to its SBE Postdoctoral Research Fellowships (SPRF) program. The goal of the fellowship is to provide advanced training and experience to early-career scientists, broaden participation of underrepresented groups in science, prepare doctoral level scientists for future careers, and assist new scientists in directing

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Can Shifting Social Norms Help Mitigate Climate Change?

Climate change is the result of many human activities, from carbon emissions to deforestation, and it will take multiple and varied interventions to mitigate it, including legislation, regulation, and market-based solutions implemented at local, national, and global levels. Demand-side factors, such as changes in social norms, can also help by creating political pressure for increased

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6 Ways You’re Thinking Wrong–and What You Can Do About Them

WHEN I WAS a graduate student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, doing research in cognitive psychology, our lab group went out every now and then for nachos and beers. It was a great opportunity for us to ask our adviser about things that wouldn’t likely come up in our more formal meetings. At

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How to Show Your Friends You Love Them, According to a Friendship Expert

When psychologist and friendship expert Marisa Franco went through a rough breakup in 2015, she felt like she had no more love in her life. So Franco leaned on her friends for support. They did yoga, cooked and read together. As she and her friends grew closer, she realized they were a deep well of

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How Rude? Dealing With the Big #@$%! Changes in Workplace Etiquette

The old rules of business etiquette are in big bleeping trouble. Ghosting is on the rise, with some workers not even showing up for their first day. Those who do stay are texting during meetings, skipping those team bonding happy hours or not returning emails and Slack messages. Is this a result of the pandemic

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