General Psychology
Oxytocin Helps Dogs and People Bond
Oxytocin, sometimes called the “love hormone,” plays a key role in human bonding. It’s involved in trust, empathy, romantic attachment and other pro-social emotions and states of mind. Interestingly, oxytocin isn’t just important for humans. It also appears to affect dogs’ social behavior, and in particular how dogs interact with humans. A study published in…
Read MoreNostalgia Is a Powerful Motivator
Sometimes the best way to prepare for the future is to get stuck in the past. Nostalgia is the quintessential bittersweet emotion, but as far as the science is concerned, the sweet seems to outweigh the bitter. Several studies have looked at how nostalgia affects people, and it turns out nostalgia is a vitalizing emotion…
Read MoreThe Psychological Cost of the Great Recession
There are a lot of statistics that can tell you how bad the 2008 financial crisis was. In the US, unemployment almost doubled. More than half the country saw their total wealth go down. The average person was working a record-low 33 hours a week. The psychological effects of the economic crisis are harder to…
Read MoreEmployees Are Committed When They Trust Their Boss
What makes employees loyal to their employer? Competitive salaries? Lavish benefits? OK, those things definitely don’t hurt. But some new research suggests that trust also plays an important role. The study, a collaboration between researchers from Peking University’s psychology department and Nankai University’s business school, found that employees who trusted their supervisors felt more emotionally…
Read MoreWant to Be a Better Teacher? Use Gestures
When we hear someone talk, we don’t just listen to their words. We combine what they’re saying with their body language and any other information we have to put together a fuller picture of what’s being communicated. The same thing is going on when teachers communicate ideas to students in a classroom setting. After all,…
Read MoreSense of Smell Predicts Size of Social Network
What’s that smell? That’s the smell of your social network. A study just published ended up with some results that will make you stop and think – or at the very least, stop and sniff. It turns out your sense of smell may predict the size of your social network. In particular, people who are…
Read MoreHelping Others Is One of the Best Ways of Helping Yourself
Let’s say you find someone who just did something generous and put them on the spot by interviewing them. You ask them, “Why did you do that generous thing?” They might say “because it was the right thing to do” or “because I wanted to give back.” What it really comes down to, though, is…
Read MoreThinking Stress Is Bad for You Actually Makes Stress Bad for You
A few months ago, I saw the documentary Stress: Portrait of a Killer. As you can tell from the name, it’s not a film that has a lot of good things to say about stress. It goes into the very serious effects chronic stress has on the brain and the body. But stress isn’t all…
Read More5 Facts About Optimism
Honestly, I tend to tune out when people talk about the power of positive thinking. The idea that being optimistic can solve all your problems never really rang true to me. Surely it should go in the other direction, that you become more optimistic by solving your problems, no? Still, one of the lessons life…
Read MoreIs Job-Hopping in Your Genes?
People are switching jobs more than ever before. An analysis published by LinkedIn this week found that job-hopping has almost doubled in the last two decades. Chalk it up to a changing economy, or maybe just another problem with millennials. But a new study suggests that job hopping might also have a genetic component. To…
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