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  • Wat u over uw ziekte denkt, is belangrijk voor uw genezing

    De Standaard: Een juiste diagnose is uiteraard cruciaal als je ziek bent, maar nieuw onderzoek toont aan dat ook het beeld dat de patiënt zelf heeft over de aandoening, een rol speelt. Van onze medewerkster Als je een diagnose te horen krijgt, heb je meestal al een beeld van die ziekte: de oorzaak, hoe lang het probleem kan duren, de impact op je leven en je gezin, en hoe de aandoening gecontroleerd of genezen wordt. Uit onderzoek aan de universiteit van Auckland en Kings College, Londen, blijkt dat dat beeld een grotere rol speelt voor iemands gezondheid dan wetenschappers tot nu toe dachten.

  • Two Heads Are Not Better Than One

    The Huffington Post: Once we saw the house, we knew that it would be just perfect for our recently blended family. Room for three not quite adult but definitely not young children. Great kitchen. A basement where one could fantasize about happy adolescents (first fantasy) playing pool and ping-pong (second fantasy) while engaging in wholesome evening activities (third fantasy). And office space for two. After all, we had been looking for a new home for months in what felt like a Bataan march through too many other homes. Once we walked through this one, we came, we saw, we put in a contract.

  • How to Gain Self Control

    Scientific American: We’ve all had that moment: you wanna punch some jerk right in the face. So, what stops us? Well, simply put, self-control. But it turns out each of us has a limited quantity of self-control. Past studies have shown, for example, that stopping yourself from taking a cookie for about an hour is likely to increase your aggression later that day. And there are tricks to increase our stash of control. A new study shows you can practice it, as one would practice any new skill, Read the whole story: Scientific American

  • A golfer attempts to make a short putt

    Get Me Out of this Slump! Visual Illusions Improve Sports Performance

    One way players might be able to improve their chances at making key shots is by tricking themselves into thinking the goal, the basket, or the target is bigger than it really is.

  • APS Fellow Helps Make Life With Autism a Little Easier

    When she was a graduate student in the late 1970s, APS Fellow Geraldine Dawson worked with a family that changed her life. They had an autistic child and “I was just captured by the experience and decided to devote my entire career to it,” Dawson told Autism Talk TV. Today, Dawson is a professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as well as Chief Science Officer of Autism Speaks. She is recognized as a pioneer in the study of autism who has used brain imaging to analyze neural irregularities associated with the disease. She has also studied the genetics of autism and helped to pinpoint some of the earliest symptoms of the disorder.

  • Emotion: The Emotion Wars

    Psychology Today: Science, just like art, is subject to big shifts in the way we think about ourselves. For the past two decades, psychology has favored "inside" explanations of behavior: Who we are is largely determined by our makeup. We are hostages to our genes. But the cutting edge is now shifting. Evidence is amassing that the environment we inhabit shapes even what we thought was most fixed about ourselves. One orthodoxy of psychology in the past two decades has been that emotions are hardwired into us and their facial display is universal, and thus recognizable, across cultures. We just "read" the emotions that are written on a face.

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