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Taking Time for Others
The Wall Street Journal: Tired of feeling starved for time? Try spending it on someone else, says a new paper by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, Harvard Business School and Yale School of Management. Cutting back on commitments is the usual response to feeling harried, but the new research—to be published in a coming issue of Psychological Science—found that people who donated time to others actually experienced feelings of "time affluence," a sense of having ample time to complete other tasks.
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Stephen Colbert, Scientific Pioneer
The Huffington Post: In my last post here, I explored what I called the science of "truthiness": How we can come to understand the denial of science, on issues like global warming, by examining the underlying psychology of political conservatism itself. But I must confess that in that item, I was relying on a fairly clichéd understanding of the word "truthiness." Since it was first coined by Stephen Colbert in 2005, the term has taken on a massive life of its own -- coming to mean, in its broadest sense, the problem of people making up their own reality, one just "truthy" enough that they actually believe it.
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A Psychologist Goes To The Zoo: An Interview with Terry L. Maple
Scientific American: I first became aware of Dr. Terry L. Maple when I read his article in the latest issue of The Observer, the magazine of the Association for Psychological Science. Maple is former president and CEO of the Zoo Atlanta as well as the Palm Beach Zoo, and is currently a professor in the departments of psychology and integrative biology at the Harriett Wilkes Honors College at the Boca Raton campus of Florida Atlantic University. Dr. Maple became the Director of the Atlanta Zoo in 1984 at the request of then-Mayor Andrew Young.
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The Benefits of Daydreaming
Smithsonian: Does your mind wander? During a class or meeting, do you find yourself staring out the window and thinking about what you’ll do tomorrow or next week? As a child, were you constantly reminded by teachers to stop daydreaming? Well, psychological research is beginning to reveal that daydreaming is a strong indicator of an active and well-equipped brain. Tell that to your third-grade teacher. A new study, published in Psychological Science by researchers from the University of Wisconsin and the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Science, suggests that a wandering mind correlates with higher degrees of what is referred to as working memory.
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Why Republicans and Democrats Can’t Feel Each Other’s Pain
TIME: Shakespeare asked rhetorically whether Christians and Jews are not “hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, heal’d by the same means, warm’d and cool’d by the same winter and summer?” The same can be said of Republicans and Democrats, but if you ask people on opposite sides of the aisle to try to empathize with one another, they tend to consider their rivals as not equally human. That’s not a mere observation of election-year political antics, but a finding from scientific research.
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Keeping a secret can be a real physical burden
Yahoo: Feeling burdened by a secret? Does being sworn to secrecy make you feel sluggish and tied? That physical anguish isn't all in your head. A new study, published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, found that secrets really do "weigh people down," and not just mentally. Michael Slepian, a researcher at Tufts University, found that in four different tests, keeping a secret proved to have real -- and perceived -- physical effects. In the first test, Slepian and his colleagues found 40 people were told to recall a secret. They were then each asked to estimate the steepness of a hill.