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Technology Is Ruining Our Memories—And Also Might Be Making Us Smarter
New Republic: With Facebook and cellphones, we no longer have to remember our friends’ birthdays or their phone numbers. A new study shows how all that forgetting might be a good thing. Saving information on a computer changes the way our brains store information, making it easier to learn something new, according to scientists at University of California, Santa Cruz. “By saving some information, people put themselves in a better position to remember other information,” the Psychological Science study says. Outsourcing info for later wasn’t invented with the PC, of course: writing a shopping list or scribbling on a post-it serve the same function.
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Distraction Is No Longer A Barrier For Learning
Gizmodo: Does your kid complain that he is unable to focus on his study because he is being distracted by things around him? If next time he says so, don't believe him. A new study, published in the journal Psychological Science, reveals that distraction doesn't affect learning process. "As long as our attention is as divided when we have to recall a motor skill as it was when we learned it, we'll do just fine," says the team of researchers at Brown University, US. For those of you who are not aware what motor skill means, here is a simple definition: it is a function, which involves the precise movement of muscles with the intent to perform a specific act.
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To make better food choices, wait before you decide
CTV News: Whether you choose celery or chocolate could be a question of how quickly your brain takes healthfulness into account, according to a new study by a team of neuroeconomists at the California Institute of Technology. "What we wanted to find out was at what point the taste of the foods starts to become integrated into the choice process, and at what point health is integrated," says lead author Nicolette Sullivan, a graduate student at Caltech.
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You Are Built to Be Kind
New York Magazine: Let's take a few minutes this dreary winter Wednesday to remind ourselves that people aren't always the worst. In a neat little animated video published yesterday by the University of California, Berkeley, psychologist Dacher Keltner explains that we were essentially built to be nice. Keltner explains his own work using brain imaging technology, in which he's shown images of human suffering to people in the lab. Read the whole story: New York Magazine
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Why Tom Brady’s F-Bombs Are A-OK
Boston.com: Nope, when it came to Brady and his F-Bombs, we pulled an anti-Rolling Stone and decided to do some reporting. In 2012, the Association for Psychological Science published a piece called "The Science of Swearing" in which its authors studied more than 10,000 episodes of public swearing by adults and children. "Swearing can occur with any emotion and yield positive or negative outcomes. Our work so far suggests that most uses of swear words are not problematic . . . and rarely have we witnessed negative consequences," authors Timothy Jay and Kristin Janschewitz wrote. Read the whole story: Boston.com
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Across America, whites are biased and they don’t even know it
The Washington Post: Most white Americans demonstrate bias against blacks, even if they're not aware of or able to control it. It's a surprisingly little-discussed factor in the anguishing debates over race and law enforcement that followed the shootings of unarmed black men by white police officers. Such implicit biases -- which, if they were to influence split-second law enforcement decisions, could have life or death consequences -- are measured by psychological tests, most prominently the computerized Implicit Association Test, which has been taken by over two million people online at the website Project Implicit. ...