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Science Says There Is Such a Thing as Too Little Procrastination and It Will Make You Less Successful
There are a million and one articles out there about how to stop procrastinating. This column isn't one of them. This column is here to tell you that this is such a thing as procrastinating too little. If that seems like utter nonsense to you, fear not. It was complete gibberish to me too when I first came across the science of something called "precrastination," but the research on the subject turns out to be pretty clear. We can make ourselves less productive by rushing to do tasks, just as much as by putting them off. Here's how. ... You probably shouldn't have, according to a now classic 2014 experiment by Pennsylvania State University psychologist David Rosenbaum.
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Op-Ed: Implicit bias puts lives in jeopardy. Can mandatory training reduce the risk?
The California State Assembly is preparing to vote on three bills to require mandatory training on implicit bias for law enforcement officers, medical professionals, judges and trial lawyers. The legislation singles out those professions because they are roles in which unconscious biases might put the lives of others in jeopardy. But the truth is, we all carry around unconscious stereotypes that can lead to differences in how we think about and treat others.
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BIRACIAL AMERICANS FACE UNIQUE STEREOTYPES, ACCORDING TO A NEW STUDY
The growing number of biracial Americans could, in theory, lead to a less prejudiced society. But new research suggests that these Americans aren't so much shattering stereotypes as finding themselves pigeonholed with new ones. "A lot of stereotypes of black-white biracial people were completely different from the ones people have about white people and black people," reports Northwestern University psychologist Sylvia Perry, who authored the study with fellow researchers Allison Skinner and Sarah Gaither. "This suggests that people might actually think of biracial people as their own racial group, rather than just a combination of their parents' racial groups."
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New Research From Psychological Science
A sample of research exploring: rewards, attention, and working memory; testosterone and emotional control in police recruits; and gene-environment interactions linking early adversity and romantic relationships.
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‘Emotion detection’ AI is a $20 billion industry. New research says it can’t do what it claims.
In just a handful of years, the business of emotion detection — using artificial intelligence to identify how people are feeling — has moved beyond the stuff of science fiction to a $20 billion industry. Companies like IBM and Microsoft tout software that can analyze facial expressions and match them to certain emotions, a would-be superpower that companies could use to tell how customers respond to a new product or how a job candidate is feeling during an interview. But a far-reaching review of emotion research finds that the science underlying these technologies is deeply flawed. The problem? You can’t reliably judge how someone feels from what their face is doing.
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Why Are Area 51 Conspiracy Theories So Popular? Here’s What Psychologists Say
Here’s hoping there are aliens at Area 51. For one thing: they probably have cool spaceships. For another, the extraterrestrials are said to have arrived in 1947, so if they were going to eat us, they likely would have done so by now. Finally, answer this question: What’s more interesting, a world with aliens or a world without them? Area 51 has been much in the news lately, ever since the June 27 launch of the Facebook page named “Storm Area 51, They Can’t Stop All of Us.” The crowdsourced semi-satirical raid on the secretive Air Force base is scheduled for Sept. 20 at 3:00 a.m.