Linking Developmental Delays and Parenting Strategies With Inclusivity in Mind

How do parents adjust their behavior in the context of neurodiversity?  Under the Cortex features Alexandra Sullivan (University of California, San Francisco), a psychological scientist who studies the link between parenting and developmental delays. In this episode, Sullivan and APS’s Özge G. Fischer-Baum discuss parenting strategies with an inclusive approach.  Sullivan also recently published an […]

Linking Developmental Delays and Parenting Strategies With Inclusivity in Mind Read More »

Why We Split the World Into Good and Evil — And Make Decisions We Regret

Humans carve the world cleanly in two when they feel threatened. There’s a right and a wrong, a good and an evil, an us and a them. In normal times, this behavior is most obvious in people with serious depression or borderline personality disorder. Psychologists call it “splitting.” …

Why We Split the World Into Good and Evil — And Make Decisions We Regret Read More »

Scientists Discuss How to Study the Psychology of Collectives, Not Just Individuals

About the Journal Launched by the Association for Psychological Science in 2006, Perspectives on Psychological Science is a bimonthly journal publishing an eclectic mix of provocative reports and articles, including broad integrative reviews, overviews of research programs, meta-analyses, theoretical statements, and articles on topics such as the philosophy of science, opinion pieces about major issues in the

Scientists Discuss How to Study the Psychology of Collectives, Not Just Individuals Read More »

‘Forget I Said That’: The Evolutionary Drive to Disclose May Lead to Oversharing 

The choice to share private information about ourselves with someone else is often framed as a strategic decision: We weigh the risks to our reputation against the potential benefits of social connection.   But this framework doesn’t explain why people are so often willing to share information that threatens their own interests, and that they later

‘Forget I Said That’: The Evolutionary Drive to Disclose May Lead to Oversharing  Read More »

The Black Mamba Effect: Psychological Science Says Adopting an Alter Ego Boosts Confidence, Determination, and Performance

For years, whenever we asked each other for advice, my daughters and I often replied, “What would Granddaddy Haden do?” Usually, that would end the problem-solving: My dad would have chosen the hard way through, not the easy way out. “What would Granddaddy Haden do?” became shorthand for making a decision you could live with.

The Black Mamba Effect: Psychological Science Says Adopting an Alter Ego Boosts Confidence, Determination, and Performance Read More »

2023’s Mind-Bending Revelations in the Brain Sciences

This year was full of roiling debate and speculation about the prospect of machines with superhuman capabilities that might, sooner than expected, leave the human brain in the dust. A growing public awareness of ChatGPT and other so-called large language models (LLMs) dramatically expanded public awareness of artificial intelligence. In tandem, it raised the question

2023’s Mind-Bending Revelations in the Brain Sciences Read More »

Is Our Early Attachment Our Destiny? Finding the Link Between Attachment Patterns and Personality Disorders 

Attachment is a recent popular topic that has entered the public eye, but psychological researchers have been investigating attachment patterns for decades. What is the relationship between early attachment personality disorders? Is there an overlap?   APS’s journal Clinical Psychological Science features an article with a new perspective into how attachment style can be linked to

Is Our Early Attachment Our Destiny? Finding the Link Between Attachment Patterns and Personality Disorders  Read More »

Scroll to Top
Scroll to Top