- Psychopaths: Murderers Show Psychiatric Conditions in Words They Use to Describe Killing – ABC News
- Everything You Need to Know About That Freaky Dream Last Night
- Women defy biology to avoid giving birth on Halloween | Try Nerdy
- How Friends Ruin Memory: The Social Conformity Effect | Wired Science | Wired.com
- Motorists Warned Not To Listen To the World’s Most Relaxing Song
- Six Famous Thought Experiments, Animated in 60 Seconds Each | Brain Pickings
- Our Divided Brains Might Be Making Us Unhappy: A Plea for a More Right-Brained World
- What’s the power of a good luck charm? – CNN.com
- Psychologists’ Golf Trick Shows Superstition Boosts Performance | Wired Science | Wired.com
Psychopaths, Halloween and a Song
In links on September 1, 2012 at 7:31 pmBrains, Spanking and Candid Cameras
In links on October 15, 2011 at 2:19 pm- The First Real-Time Study of Parents Spanking Their Kids – TIME Healthland
- BBC News – Brain ‘rejects negative thoughts’
- What reward does your brain actually seek? – Boing Boing
- Candid Camera gag (1962) reveals the pressure to conform to group behavior – Boing Boing
- How to Hack Your Memory: 4 Tips to Achieve Perfect Memory « Lettuce be Cereal
- Forced Exercise’s Effects on the Brain – NYTimes.com
- Neuroscience explanations are more believable than mere psychological ones – Boing Boing
- Jonah Lehrer on Daniel Kahneman’s New Book | Head Case – WSJ.com
Siblings, Nature, and Malpractice
In links on October 7, 2011 at 11:23 pm- AFP: Marijuana blocks PTSD symptoms in rats: study
- Female Promiscuity Is a Biological Imperitive
- States Cut Malpractice Payouts by Encouraging Doctors to Apologize – The Daily Stat – September 22, 2011 – Harvard Business Review
- Why Being Relaxed Makes Us Spend Too Much Money | Wired Science | Wired.com
- Are You Teaching People to Treat You Badly? | Psychology Today
- The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker – review | Books | The Guardian
- Underestimating Nearby Nature
- The Sibling Effect — By Jeffrey Kluger — Book Review – NYTimes.com
- Why Do You Close Your Eyes to Remember? | Psychology Today