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All the Lonely (Middle-Aged) People, Where Do They All Come From?
Teaching: Why are U.S. middle-aged adults experiencing increasingly high levels of loneliness and depression? A three-part lesson brings this cutting-edge research into the classroom.
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Student Notebook: Roadmap to Grants and Funding for International Students
Scholars with diverse international experiences share insights on how to thrive in global academic landscapes.
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Generational Shifts, New Methods, and the Future of Our Field
Psychological science has never been more societally relevant, says APS President James Pennebaker in his third presidential column.
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A Psychologist Says This Exercise Can Make You More Hopeful In 14 Days
STANARDSVILLE, Va. — For much of my life, winter was something to be endured. Preferably, indoors. ... Another surprise finding: The emotional benefits are just as powerful in winter as in the rest of the year. That was the same conclusion reached by University of Chicago neuroscientist Marc Berman, author of the 2025 book “Nature and the Mind.” He measured the benefits of a 50-minute walk in the Ann Arbor arboretum and discovered that those who walked in January experienced the same benefit as those who walked in June.
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How to Get Through the Rest of Winter
The tail end of winter can be a bit rough. In the Northeast, I’ve had enough of extreme cold, gray skies and piles of snow that refuse to melt. The holidays are a dim memory. I’m sick of my giant parka. Spring doesn’t arrive until March 20. “By this time of year, winter can feel like it drags,” said Mark Seery, a professor of psychology at the University at Buffalo who studies coping and resilience. But telling yourself that “this is going to be crap for the next month,” is not the best strategy, he added. Instead, Dr. Seery recommended “finding things you can control around the edges.”
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What You Have in Common With a Pigeon and Why It’s Causing Problems for You
Today nearly everyone in America has become just as silly. People are “exactly like the pigeons,” says Peter Balsam, a professor of psychology at Columbia University. Because, he says, we carry around a device that elicits this bizarre behavior: our phones. Swipe, swipe, swipe. Scroll, scroll, scroll. Tap, tap, tap. ... Neuroscientists have found that the brain chemical dopamine draws us to these signals. Dopamine was once believed to encode pleasure, but a vast amount of evidence accumulated over recent decades suggests that’s not quite right. Instead, it plays several roles. It triggers motivation for and wanting of fundamental needs.