Not actually SPSP but the closest I could find |
Sunday, January 29, 2012
SPSP 2012: Poster Highlights
Posted by
Juli
Saturday, January 28, 2012
SPSP 2012: Social Relationships Round-up
Posted by
Amie
SPSP 2012: How does culture change over time?
Posted by
Unknown
Today's "Cultural Change Over Time" symposium was a perfect example of why I enjoy SPSP so much: The talks involved (1) compelling research questions answered using (2) innovative methods. Anyway, the general question the researchers of this symposium attempted to answer was "How can we tell if culture is changing across time?" The answers might surprise you!
Friday, January 27, 2012
SPSP 2012: Watchdogs, Witch-hunts, and What to do about False-Positive Findings
Posted by
Unknown
In a recent trend, the field of social-personality psychology has become sensitive to the data reporting and analytic strategies that go into the publication of a research paper. Today at the “False Positive Findings are Frequent Findable and Fixable” symposium at SPSP the three speakers presented some very polarizing observations about this trend in our field.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
SPSP 2012: Oxytocin, Threat, and the “Mama Bear Effect”
Posted by
Unknown
“Oxytocin may be critically involved in both ethnocentrism
and parochial altruism.”
-Carsten
de Dreu, University of Amsterdam
Long called the “Love Hormone,” the hormone oxytocin has
been implicated for more than a decade in such prosocial activities as empathy,
trust, and generosity (with both human and animal models). At the social
neuroendocrinology pre-conference at this year’s SPSP conference, some
influential researchers in the field of social psychology laid out why oxytocin
might also have another side that is less fuzzy, and more defensive.
Monday, January 23, 2012
SPSP Conference: Where social and personality psychologists come to gather
Posted by
Amie
Sunny San Diego |
This annual conference is a bit of a whirlwind but its a chance to hear about recent research in the field, catch up with old friends, network with new ones, and share your own research findings. Although this conference focuses on social and personality psychology, the talks are still on a wide variety of topics. For example, here are a few random symposia titles selected from the schedule:
- "Moral Ironies"
- "Every Rose has its Thorns: Navigating the Risks and Rewards of Relationships"
- "Menstrual Cycle Effects on Women's Mate Preferences? Critical Perspectives"
- "'A Christian Nation' Facing the 21st Century: How Religion Shapes Modern America, and its Role in a Changing Society"
- "The Consequences of Being Low on the Totem Pole: Deprivation, Status, and Resource Choices"
- "Latino Culture and the Shaping of Social and Personality Processes"
- "Money as a Motivator: From Brain to Behavior"
A glance at an SPSP Poster Session |
So why am I telling you all of this, besides to invoke a bit of sympathy for how tired we will all be by Sunday morning? To let you know that its not going to be a normal week here at Psych Your Mind. We've decided to forgo our usual posts this week in order to do a semi "live-blogging" from the SPSP conference. We are not entirely sure what this will look like, but likely it will end up being each of us posting one or two brief write-ups summarizing the talks we heard that day, highlighting interesting or favorite findings, or merely complaining about the sheer enormity of the entire event (okay, less likely to be that last one, I'll save that for the personal blog). We may also be tweeting one-liners if we hear an interesting tidbit or attend a particularly cutting-edge talk that we just can't wait to tell the world about. So keep checking back with us here at PYM all weekend long (starting Thursday)!
If you'd like to find out more about the conference, you can go to the website here or check out their schedule here.
Any questions about the SPSP Conference? Any particular talks or topics you want us to blog about? Perhaps some words of comfort?
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Do Positive Emotions Shape Our Health?
Posted by
Unknown
This post continues our tradition of guest blogs on Psych-Your-Mind! Here, Elizabeth Hopper-- graduate student at the University of California, Santa Barbara-- discusses the possibility that positive emotions might matter a lot for your health. Read on!
source |
You may have heard that negative emotions can have an impact
on your health: for example, you may have been told that people who are prone
to becoming stressed or hostile have a higher risk of cardiovascular
disease. But what about positive
emotions? Are positive emotions simply a
nice experience to have, or can they actually serve to protect your health? In today's post, I'll discuss some of the
recent findings on positive emotions and health, and discuss how positive
emotions might help to lower your risk of heart disease.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Is Graduate School a Ponzi Scheme?
Posted by
Unknown
A couple of years ago, this article ran in the Economist. In the article, the author takes the point of view that the pursuit of a PhD degree is a waste of time. Whether or not you agree with this perspective, it is important to consider the points being made. If you are, or have been, a graduate student, you probably learned much of this during your time in graduate school.
Friday, January 13, 2012
Friday Fun: Five Surprising Findings from 2011
Posted by
Juli
Monday, January 9, 2012
Psychology says couples who play together stay together
Posted by
Amie
To be completely correct, psychological research suggests that couples who play together feel closer, experience more positive emotions, and as a result are happier together, but that doesn’t have the same ring does it?
This couple knows how to keep it exciting |
If boredom, is the silent relationship killer, novel and arousing activities seem to be the powerful antidote. Art Aron and colleagues have found that couples who engage in more novel and arousing activities together are happier in their relationships. And these results aren’t just correlational – Aron actually had couples come into the lab and engage in exciting or mundane tasks. Couples in the exciting condition got strapped together with Velcro and had to crawl their way through an obstacle course while holding a pillow between them. The explanation of the mundane activity might put you to sleep. Couples who got to take part in the Velcro obstacle course reported feeling happier in their relationships than couples who took part in the mundane activity or no activity at all. Why does participation in a novel and arousing obstacle course lead to a happier relationship?
Friday, January 6, 2012
Friday Fun: Michael's Favorite Posts of 2011
Posted by
Unknown
source |
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
How to trick yourself into keeping your New Year's Resolution
Posted by
Juli
Source |
Monday, January 2, 2012
The Difficulties of Scientific Writing (An Update)
Posted by
Unknown
Writing is so hard! |
I look back on this bit of writing with equal parts pride (the Observer goes out to all APS members) and embarrassment (here I was, early in my career, trying to tell people how to write). Anyway, as we are starting the New Year, I thought it might be fitting to take another look at this piece and give my new perspective on scientific writing, now that I've had a bit more experience. Here goes nothing!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)