![]() |
Source: Daniel Oines |
Friday, May 15, 2015
10 Tips for Making a Tough Decision
Posted by
Juli
Friday, March 27, 2015
The Benefits of Capturing your Everyday Experiences
Posted by
Amie
![]() |
Source |
What would you rather do right now, write down the last
conversation you had or watch a funny video guaranteed to make you laugh? What
about a month from now – do you think you’d rather read about a random conversation
you had last month or watch another funny video? These are some of the questions
researchers asked in a recent set of studies exploring our tendency to underestimate how much pleasure we get
out of rediscovering mundane experiences. Participants in these studies consistently
expected that they would not be very interested in rereading a log of an
ordinary event in their everyday lives. But a couple of months down the road
when the time came to reread that log, they found themselves much more interested
and experienced more pleasure than they had expected. This was partly because
they had forgotten a lot more of the event than they had expected they would! In
the moment, we think why record our everyday experiences, we will remember them
in the future and they aren’t that memorable anyway. Even just a month later
though, our memories of the event begin to dim, the details fall away, and what
once seemed ordinary feels a bit more extraordinary.
Thursday, March 26, 2015
Gender Imbalance in Discussions of Best Research Practices
Posted by
Unknown
Over the last couple of weeks there have been some really excellent blog posts about gender representation in discussions of best research practices. The first was a shared Email correspondence between Simine Vazire and Lee Jussim. The second was a report of gender imbalance in discussions of best research practices by Alison Ledgerwood, Elizabeth Haines, and Kate Ratliff. Before then (May 2014), Sanjay Srivastava wrote about a probable diversity problem in the best practices debate. Go read these posts! I'll be here when you return.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
SPSP 2015: Actually Predicting the Future
Posted by
Unknown
In
regression (a common statistical practice used in social science research) we
often attempt to predict the outcome of a given dependent measure (the DV)
based on what we know about other measured variables theoretically related to
the DV (the IVs). This common regression method has one problem though: We are
predicting values for data that we have already collected. What if we were to
engage in actual prediction? That is, what if we attempted to predict the values
of a DV that is unknown? How might we do this and what would be the benefit?
This
was a fascinating talk presented by Liz Page-Gould of the University of Toronto
at the Future of Social Psychology Symposium!
SPSP 2015: Status Shapes Preferences for Redistribution
Posted by
Unknown
A lot
of people think about political ideology as a powerful causal force that
influences the structure of our society and our respective positions within it.
In the politics and inequality symposium Jazmin Brown-Iannuzzi of the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and her colleagues examined political
ideology from a different perspective: Instead of shaping the structure of
society, does political ideology arise from our position within that structure?
That is, do we create our political beliefs strategically in order to justify
our own lives and the lives of those around us?
Thursday, February 26, 2015
SPSP 2015: The world thinks that atheists are immoral
Posted by
Unknown
At the self and identity pre-conference this morning Will Gervais presented a series of studies (available open access right here) suggesting that people seem to automatically associate atheism with a lack of moral character.
SPSP 2015: The Contagious Spread of Affect
Posted by
Unknown
I was fortunate to attend the first session of the emotion pre-conference this morning and had a chance to hear about some amazing research conducted by Wendy Mendes (my post-doc advisor), Sara Waters, and Tessa West. The research examined the extent that affective states are transmitted between individuals.
The researchers reasoned that social living organisms are widely characterized by synchronous actions and states--with humans groups being particularly likely to synchronize their emotions and behaviors (here is a profound example of our capacity to synchronize during communal events).
The researchers reasoned that social living organisms are widely characterized by synchronous actions and states--with humans groups being particularly likely to synchronize their emotions and behaviors (here is a profound example of our capacity to synchronize during communal events).
SPSP 2015: We're here in Long Beach!
Posted by
Unknown
It's been a few months since I've posted on this blog, and I'm planning to change that over the next several days: It is time for the annual convention of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology and we've got three full days packed with social-personality content to share with the blogosphere. I'll be writing a few short posts over the course of the conference--but before I do I want to point out where you can find some of the current and former bloggers on this website, right here at the convention:
Thursday
Katherine Thorson: Poster Session A
Cardiac Vagal Tone predicts Responsivity to Self-Regulatory Thought Inductions: Poster A273
Friday
Amie Gordon: Symposium Session A
Bringing Sleep to Social Psychology: Considering the Effect of Sleep on our Emotions, Relationships and Intergroup Relations
Friday, February 27, 2015, 9:45 AM - 11:00 AM, Promenade Ballroom 104C
Michael Kraus: Symposium Session A
The Politics of Inequality and the Inequality of Politics
Friday, February 27, 2015, 9:45 AM - 11:00 AM, Room 203ABC
Saturday
Jennifer Stellar: Symposium Session I
A Big Helping of Humble Pie: Novel Benefits and New Methods for Cultivating Humility
Saturday, February 28, 2015, 5:00 PM - 6:15 PM, Room 103A
Maya Kuehn: Poster Session E
Rejection Resiliency and Social Influence: Poster E004
Thursday
Katherine Thorson: Poster Session A
Cardiac Vagal Tone predicts Responsivity to Self-Regulatory Thought Inductions: Poster A273
Friday
Amie Gordon: Symposium Session A
Bringing Sleep to Social Psychology: Considering the Effect of Sleep on our Emotions, Relationships and Intergroup Relations
Friday, February 27, 2015, 9:45 AM - 11:00 AM, Promenade Ballroom 104C
Michael Kraus: Symposium Session A
The Politics of Inequality and the Inequality of Politics
Friday, February 27, 2015, 9:45 AM - 11:00 AM, Room 203ABC
Saturday
Jennifer Stellar: Symposium Session I
A Big Helping of Humble Pie: Novel Benefits and New Methods for Cultivating Humility
Saturday, February 28, 2015, 5:00 PM - 6:15 PM, Room 103A
Maya Kuehn: Poster Session E
Rejection Resiliency and Social Influence: Poster E004
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)