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  • Why Do People Mix Up Names?

    President Biden introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as Russia’s President Putin. Donald Trump named Nikki Haley when he meant Nancy Pelosi. And getting some comedic mileage out of such flubs, the writers of “Friends” had Ross call his bride-to-be Rachel. Her name was Emily. ... The brain remembers information by linking new bits of data with existing information of similar meaning or context. That makes proper nouns, which are arbitrary “nonsense words,” harder to learn, said Neil Mulligan, a cognitive psychologist who studies memory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Though it occurs nearly instantaneously, recalling a name is a multistep endeavor.

  • Practicing Gratitude Could Help You Live Longer

    Appreciating the little things in life can leave a lasting impact on your health. ... “It’s not completely surprising to me, just given what we know on the health benefits of positive emotions more generally, that a person’s disposition for gratitude might actually even lengthen their life,” said Dr. Philip Watkins, a professor of psychology at Eastern Washington University and author of the book “Gratitude and the Good Life: Toward a Psychology of Appreciation.” Research has found that gratitude benefits individuals’ happiness and flourishing, added Watkins, who was not involved with the new study.

  • Nora S. Newcombe speaking at the APS Annual Convention in 2023.

    Newcombe Awarded Rumelhart Prize in Cognitive Science

    APS William James Fellow Nora S. Newcombe, a distinguished researcher at Temple University and Editor of Psychological Science in the Public Interest, is the recipient of the 25th David E. Rumelhart Prize in Cognitive Science from the Cognitive Science Society.

  • Confidence Is Key to Well-being. Here Are 5 Ways to Boost Yours

    Everyone has encountered them: people who always appear to know what they are doing. They gladly take control of a situation, express their opinions as if they were established facts or plunge into a project believing they are going to succeed — with or without the required experience. “Confidence — it is probably the most important resource in human well-being and human performance, I believe,” neuroscientist and psychologist Ian Robertson told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta recently on his podcast Chasing Life. Robertson is a professor emeritus of psychology and the codirector of the Global Brain Health Institute at Trinity College Dublin in Ireland and the T.

  • Can Money Buy Happiness? 5 Tips to Turn Bucks Into Bliss

    Can money buy happiness? It’s an age-old question with which many — including philosophers, economists and psychologists — have wrestled. ... “This notion that money cannot buy happiness is just, like, patently false,” social psychologist Elizabeth Dunn recently told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta on his podcast Chasing Life. Dunn, a professor in the department of psychology at the University of British Columbia in Canada, conducts research that focuses, in part, on getting the most enjoyment out of money.

  • Unhappy at Work? How to Plan Your Next Move

    To find a job you actually enjoy, figure out what's making you unhappy and move forward from there, says Tessa West, author of the new book Job Therapy: Finding Work That Works for You. West offers practical exercises to help assess your strongest skill sets, your stressors and what you need next from your career. ... SEGARRA: I wonder if you've ever had a moment like this. You're brushing your teeth or driving your car or riding the subway, getting ready for work, and you think, what am I doing? I hate this job. Is this what I signed up for? TESSA WEST: It's a little like looking over at your spouse in bed and thinking, who are you? You aren't the person I married.

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