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  • Science of Speed Dating Helps Singles Find Love

    Scientific American: As a psychologist, I have always found the concept of speed dating fascinating. During a series of mini dates, each spanning no more than a couple of minutes, participants in a speed-dating event evaluate a succession of eligible singles. They make split-second decisions on matters of the heart, creating a pool of information on one of the more ineffable yet vital questions of our time—how we select our mates. The concept of rapid-fire dating has gained tremendous popularity, spreading to cities all over the world. One speed-dating company in New York City, for example, holds a gathering almost every day.

  • Q & A With Eli Finkel – The Science Behind Online Dating (Part 1)

    Eli Finkel, a social psychologist at Northwestern University, is one of five authors on a new study published in the February issue of Psychological Science in the Public Interest. The study, 'Online Dating: A Critical Analysis from the Perspective of Psychological Science' is co-authored by Paul Eastwick of Texas A & M University, Benjamin Karney of UCLA, Harry Reis of the University of Rochester and Susan Sprecher of Illinois State University. We invited our Facebook and Twitter followers to submit their questions on love, relationships and online dating to Finkel. Here is the first part of his response. Stay tuned for Part 2 later this week!

  • Trimming super-size with psychology, from half-order sides to color of the plates

    The Washington Post: Call it the alter-ego of super-sizing. Researchers infiltrated a fast-food Chinese restaurant and found up to a third of diners jumped at the offer of a half-size of the usual heaping pile of rice or noodles — even when the smaller amount cost the same. Giant portion sizes are one of the culprits behind the epidemic of bulging waistlines, and nowhere is the portion-creep more evident than in restaurants with French fry-heavy meal deals or plates overflowing with pasta. Now scientists are tapping into the psychology of eating to find ways to trim portions without people feeling cheated — focusing on everything from the starchy sides to the color of the plates.

  • Why the last chocolate tastes the best

    The Telegraph: Psychologists discovered that people become “motivated” when they know an experience is about to be completed. The University of Michigan study found that this led to a person thinking the experience would end happily. The findings, reported in the journal Psychological Science, could add weight to the saying “leaving the best for last”. “Endings affect us in lots of ways and one is this ‘positivity effect,” said researcher Ed O'Brien, who led the study. “It is something motivational. You think ‘I might as well reap the benefits of this experience even though it is going to end’ or ‘I want to get something good out of this while I still can’.

  • Comment réduire la douleur sans médicaments

    Le Figaro: On en sait aujourd'hui plus sur les mécanismes cérébraux à l'origine d'une baisse de la sensation de douleur sans antalgiques. Des études avaient déjà montré que l'effet placebo (on donne au patient un médicament sans effet en lui faisant croire qu'il en a) pouvait abaisser la sensation de douleur. Et on sait aussi que s'occuper l'esprit, par exemple faire un puzzle, peut avoir le même résultat. Dans les deux cas, l'imagerie cérébrale montre qu'une même zone du cerveau (dans le cortex préfrontal) est concernée. Des chercheurs de la Columbia Université et de l'université du Colorado ont voulu savoir si ces deux effets avaient réellement un chemin cérébral identique.

  • The M.R.S. and the Ph.D.

    The New York Times: Today women earn almost 60 percent of all bachelor’s degrees and more than half of master’s and Ph.D.’s. Many people believe that, while this may be good for women as income earners, it bodes ill for their marital prospects. As Kate Bolick wrote in a much-discussed article in The Atlantic last fall, American women face “a radically shrinking pool of what are traditionally considered to be ‘marriageable’ men — those who are better educated and earn more than they do.” Educated women worry that they are scaring away potential partners, and pundits claim that those who do marry will end up with unsatisfactory matches.

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