There are ways to strengthen bonds while keeping physical distance.
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Physically isolating yourself can feel psychologically isolating too. But there are ways to maintain connections in these crazy coronavirus times.
Pete Buttigieg speaks with members of the media on March 1 in Plains, Georgia.
AP Photo/Matt Rourke
Research on stigma and discrimination – and LGBTQ people’s own stories – can help Americans make sense of Pete Buttigieg’s historic candidacy.
‘Who thought that?’
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The captain of a ship, or a soul, doesn’t sail while ignoring the wind – sometimes they go with it, sometimes against it, but they always account for it.
Anxiety is part of life, but should not take over your life.
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A psychologist explains how to get a grip on anxiety triggered by COVID-19.
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You don’t have to be labelled with a mental illness to seek help.
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The growth mindset theory holds a person’s beliefs about their ability can be developed through effort. The fixed mindset holds a person’s abilities are fixed and can’t be changed.
Don’t worry, be happy.
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There are many ways to be happy, but we can also find comfort in the knowledge that our constant dissatisfaction is what makes us human.
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Why toilet paper? Concerns about control and hygiene are the likely reason, according to experts
Dominic Cummings is looking for ‘cognitive diversity’ but history suggests that’s not easy to define.
PA
Dominic Cummings should read up on a deeply flawed experiment from the 1940s before he reads through those job applications.
A patriotic pooch.
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A dog psychologist looks at the presidential candidates’ relationships with dogs.
Football continues to present a great chance for social mobility in Africa.
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Fame changes the bonds that some African footballers have with their home communities.
Feeling watched?
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How you feel about eating chips and wearing your pyjamas out – experiments show how differently you react when you’re being observed.
Young people stand on the steps of the Alberta legislature during the climate strike in Edmonton in 2019. Youth are often seen as problems rather than as people who are creating solutions.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Amber Bracken
Young people are often seen as lacking but research shows they’re motivated by their concern for future generations.
The rewards for doing this usually aren’t monetary.
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Because most people want to be perceived as generous, sometimes monetary incentives for doing a good deed are counterproductive.
Tom wants you to have the apple.
Yuriy Maksymiv
We don’t always realise it, but emotions play a positive role in decision making.
Freedom?
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Rules help to shape society – but always question why they’re there and who they serve.
Misconceptions abound on both sides of the aisle.
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Americans tend to think that self-identified liberals and conservatives hold more extreme views than they actually do.
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Psychologists have stigmatised science fiction fans as losers who retreat into fantasy worlds. This is unfair.
Have some healthy skepticism when you encounter images online.
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Images without context or presented with text that misrepresents what they show can be a powerful tool of misinformation, especially since photos make statements seem more believable.
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Most of us are familiar with the concept of psychological trauma. But what is collective trauma, and how can we tackle it in the wake of the bushfire crisis?