-
Is It Healthy to Use Food as a Reward?
Hi, Dan. I have final exams coming up, and I’m trying to get motivated by giving myself rewards for studying. But all the rewards I can think of involve sweets or fried foods, which will set me back on my weight-loss goals. Nothing seems to motivate me as much as a piece of chocolate cake! Any advice? —Jordan Your chocolate-cake strategy may not be so bad, if your commitment to your diet is already strong and you can manage to delay your reward. Recently, a paper in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology by Qian Xu and colleagues looked at the issue of using food as a motivator.
-
For Kids With Anxiety, Parents Learn To Let Them Face Their Fears
The first time Jessica Calise can remember her 9-year-old son Joseph's anxiety spiking was about a year ago, when he had to perform at a school concert. He said his stomach hurt and he might throw up. "We spent the whole performance in the bathroom," she recalls. After that, Joseph struggled whenever he had to do something alone, like showering or sleeping in his bedroom. He would beg his parents to sit outside the bathroom door or let him sleep in their bed. "It's heartbreaking to see your child so upset and feel like he's going to throw up because he's nervous about something that, in my mind, is no big deal," Jessica says.
-
What ‘Service With a Smile’ Means for Employee Well-Being
Expecting employees to take a one-size-fits-all approach to emotional labor can quickly lead to burnout without the right support systems in place.
-
New Research From Clinical Psychological Science
A sample of new research exploring confirmatory factor models of PTSD, mathematical modeling of emotion regulation in schizophrenia, and relating psychological and biological phenomena via mechanistic science.
-
Lisa Feldman Barrett Named Guggenheim Fellow
APS President Lisa Feldman Barrett, a leading scholar in emotion research, has received the 2019 Guggenheim Fellowship in neuroscience.
-
Researchers Explore Life Beyond p < .05
Psychology researchers are questioning the overuse of p values in statistical inference in science.