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  • What to Do If You Haven’t Saved Enough for Retirement

    CNBC: In the race to retirement a surprising number of Americans are getting to the finish line and realizing they haven’t saved enough. What’s more surprising is the number of people who have saved ZERO. One in four Baby Boomers have saved nothing for retirement and when you include their younger counterparts the number is even more startling: 34 percent of all adults have no retirement savings, according to a recent poll from Harris Interactive. Read the whole story: CNBC

  • Making the ‘Irrelevant’ Relevant to Understand Memory and Aging

    Age alters memory. But in what ways, and why? These questions comprise a vast puzzle for neurologists and psychologists. A new study looked at one puzzle piece: how older and younger adults encode and recall distracting, or irrelevant, information. The results, published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association of Psychological Science, can help scientists better understand memory and aging. “Our world contains so much information; we don’t always know which is relevant and which is irrelevant,” said Nigel Gopie, who cowrote the study with Fergus I.M. Craik and Lynn Hasher, all from the University of Toronto’s Rotman Research Institute.

  • Members in the News

    Jonathan M. Adler, Olin College of Engineering, Elle, Aug 1, 2009: Agency in Personal Narratives. George A. Bonanno, Columbia University, The New York Times, Aug 18, 2009: Mental Stress Training Is Planned for U.S. Soldiers. Andrew M. Colman, University of Leicester, Sky News, Jul 8, 2009; Daily Mail (UK), Daily Telegraph (Sydney, Australia), The Herald (Scotland), The Times of India, Jul 9, 2009; Le Scienza (Italy), Jul 10, 2009; MSNBC, Jul 14, 2009: Research Shows That “Invisible Hand” Guides Evolution of Cooperative Turn-Taking. Harris M. Cooper, Duke University, The New York Times Room for Debate Blog, Aug 30, 2009: The Crush of Summer Homework.

  • Following the Crowd: Brain Images Offer Clues to How and Why We Conform

    HealthCanal: What is conformity? A true adoption of what other people think—or a guise to avoid social rejection? Scientists have been vexed sorting the two out, even when they’ve questioned people in private. Now three Harvard University psychological scientists have used brain scans to show what happens when we take others’ opinions to heart: We take them “to brain”—specifically, to the orbitofrontal cortex and nucleus accumbens. These regions compute what we value and feel rewarded by, both primitive things like water and food and socially meaningful things like money. Read the whole story: HealthCanal

  • Study reveals parents in frontier states more likely to give babies unusual names

    The Daily Mail: If you're called Jacob, Michael or Emily, there's a better chance your parents will be from an an older state in the Northeast and gave you a common name, a Psychological Science journal study says. Parents in the original 13 states tend to choose more common baby names, compared to those in more recently-established states like Washington and Oregon. Read the whole story: The Daily Mail

  • Out of Work, Out of Time

    The New York Times: Since losing my job I’ve struggled with countless questions for which I have no suitable response: Is it healthy for my family to subsist on a diet entirely of packaged ramen, canned beans and grocery-store samples, and if so, must it be certified organic? Does baby really need a new pair of shoes? If I’m so smart how come I’m so broke? The worst question, though, and the one most likely to induce paroxysms of guilt, irritation and half-joking existential despair, is one that seems so simple to answer, but has proven the most vexing: if I’m not working, why don’t I have more time?

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