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2020 Year in Review
What happens when APS Media Relations director Charles Blue chats with APS Senior Science Writer Ludmila Nunes? A fun discussion on 2020’s most interesting research, that’s what! Many of the major news stories of 2020
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Statement on Riot at U.S. Congress
Statement by APS Executive Director Robert Gropp on the riot at the U.S. Capitol Building.
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NIH Seeks Research Proposals on Vaccine Hesitancy, Uptake, and Implementation
NIH has issued a notice of special interest for research strategies and interventions that can help in addressing the problem of vaccine hesitancy in populations and communities that experience health disparities
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The Challenges of Military Veterans in Their Transition to the Workplace
Podcast addresses the long-standing structural features of the military that have created a culture and society that is dramatically different and disconnected from civilian society.
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This One Simple Trick Can Make Your New Year’s Resolution More Likely to Stick
Want to replace your television habit with exercise? "I want to start running" could work better than "I want to quit watching TV so much." How we phrase our New Year's resolution could give us a slight edge as to whether or not we'll stick to the new habit, according to a study published Wednesday in the open-access journal PLOS One. Frame your resolution in the positive, as something you're committing to doing may work better than framing your goal around quitting a bad habit or avoiding a particular greasy food. Researchers at Stockholm University and Linköping University in Sweden analyzed resolutions made by 1,066 people.
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This Year, Try Downsizing Your Resolutions
After the unpredictable, torrid year we’ve had, the idea of making New Year’s resolutions for 2021 might seem a tad overwhelming. ... Just because it’s the first of January doesn’t mean you will automatically feel motivated to start a new habit. “You’re not going to sustain a behavior change unless you have internal motivation,” said Sara L. Dolan, an associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. So when making New Year’s resolutions, consider what changes you’d like to make, but also why you want to make them, Dr. Dolan advised. What makes you feel committed to reaching your goal? ...