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  • This is a photo of firefighter gear

    The Psychology of the Firefighter

    Regulatory flexibility may help to explain why some firefighters who experience trauma develop PTSD and other don’t, researchers find.

  • Mistargeted Messages Could Spur Help-Seeking for Depression

    Many people suffering from depression are not seeking treatment, but researchers have identified a possible communication technique that could spur help-seeking.

  • Time-as-Money Mindset Decreases Green Behaviors

    Pacific Standard: How can people be convinced to think about the environmental consequences of their behaviors? New research suggests one surprising piece of the answer may be: Pay them a salary, rather than an hourly wage. “People are less likely to engage in environmentally friendly behavior if they are paid by the hour, a form of compensation that leads people to see their time as money,” write University of British Columbia psychologists Ashley Whillans and Elizabeth Dunn.

  • Hit-and-run drivers not uncommon, but not well understood

    The Baltimore Sun: Over the past eight days, three people died and another was injured in three hit-and-run accidents in the Baltimore region. Police are still seeking the drivers in all three incidents. On Wednesday, Bishop Heather Elizabeth Cook was indicted on charges of automobile manslaughter, driving under the influence, texting while driving, and leaving the scene of the accident that killed bicyclist Thomas Palermo just days after Christmas. What leads someone to flee an accident where another person might have suffered harm? Data shows fleeing an accident is not uncommon, but there's little research on the behavior.

  • Training the Mind Not to Wander

    The New York Times: A wandering mind can lead to accidents and lost productivity. Now, a study finds that real-time brain monitoring can be used to help people regain focus. Neuroscientists at Princeton University monitored the brain activity of students who were asked to perform a repetitive task that required close attention. While lying inside an functional magnetic resonance imaging, or f.M.R.I., machine, the students were shown a series of pictures of human faces superimposed over scenery. They were told to press a button when they saw a particular kind of face (female or male) or when they saw a particular kind of scenery (inside or outside).

  • Handwriting Isn’t Dead—Smart Pens and Styluses Are Saving It

    The Wall Street Journal: Keyboards and touch screens may have turned our once-fine penmanship into a sloppy mess, but reports of the death of handwriting are premature. I can prove it: I wrote this entire column by hand. Not once did I place my hands on my laptop, tablet or phone’s keyboard. Yet every word I scribbled was almost instantly transmitted to those devices. Yes, the very technology that has put pen and paper on life support is now trying to save it. ... “People who handwrite reframe the content, and understand it better.

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