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  • Are you liberal or conservative? Your parents may be to blame

    The Globe and Mail: During Monday night’s U.S. presidential debate, Democrat and Republican operatives were no doubt glued to graphs monitoring approval ratings for various key demographics, trying to figure out if President Barack Obama, for instance, was running off with the women’s vote with all that talk of 1980s foreign policy and battleships. But new research suggests that for many viewers, debates don’t matter as much as we think. The political die may have been cast way back in childhood. Your temperament as a child and your folks’ parenting style may have a lot to do with whether you consider yourself liberal or conservative. Read the whole story: The Globe and Mail

  • To Nurture Genius, Improve Gifted Education

    Scientific American Mind: In 1957, when Sputnik took the world by storm, the Ford Foundation was several years into a project for talented students based on early college entrance.

  • I’m Right! (For Some Reason)

    The New York Times: IF we are reminded of anything this election season, it is that America is a house divided against itself. The anger and mistrust between Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, often seems as bitter as it is reflexive. Most worrisome of all, we have grown so accustomed to this divide that we no longer flinch at the brazen political attacks on either side — even when the logic underlying these attacks is hard to fathom. Take the case of two political ads recently shown on television.

  • Changing Our Environment Can Change Our Diets

    October 26, 2012 - Understanding nutrition doesn’t guarantee that we will develop healthy eating habits, says Brian Wansink of Cornell University. In this video from the Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research (OBSSR) at the National Institutes of Health, Wansink explains that our environment has a profound influence on how we eat. The lighting in the place where we’re eating, the amounts the people around us are eating, and the size of the serving spoons used to put food on our plates are all factors that influence our diets.

  • Political strength

    The Economist: Male Harris sparrows are pugnacious beasts. They signal their status by the darkness of their plumage, and woe-betide any male whose signal is false—for if an itinerant ethologist blackens a subordinate’s feathers, the dominant birds recognise it as a fraud and beat it up. Normally, though, behaviour and outward appearance are in alignment, having been arranged that way by evolution, and subordinate birds do not push their luck. For female Harris sparrows, however, plumage does not matter in this way.

  • Psychologie: rêvasser stimule la créativité (daydreaming stimulates creativity)

    Le Huffington Post: Vous culpabilisez parce que vous avez passé l'après-midi à rêvasser? Pas de panique. Sans le savoir, vous étiez peut-être en train de résoudre un problème. D'ailleurs, cela vous est peut-être déjà arrivé. Au volant, en voiture, en train de faire les courses, vous êtes concentré sur quelque chose qui n'a rien à voir avec votre travail lorsque soudain, Eurêka!, une idée ou la solution à un problème vient à vous. Ce qu'il se passe dans ces moments, des chercheurs en psychologie ont cherché à le comprendre un peu plus précisément, grâce à plusieurs études parues dans le dernier numéro de la revue Psychological Science.

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