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  • New Special Collections: New Perspectives on Psychological Science

    Four independently submitted journal articles (preface by an outstanding early-career scholar) explore the importance of contextualizing morality in order to better understand moral behaviors and change.

  • To Survive the Coronavirus, the United States Must Tighten Up

    US officials have been implementing a wide range of public health measures to mitigate the damage being wrought by the deadly new coronavirus. While social distancing, better hygiene, and flat-out travel bans may help, we have yet to address one of our biggest vulnerabilities: America’s traditionally loose culture. The decentralized, defiant, do-it-your-own-way norms that make our country so entrepreneurial and creative also deepen our danger during the coronavirus crisis. To fight this pandemic, we can’t just shift our resources; we have to shift our cultural patterns as well. Already we can see signs of panic and egocentric behavior.

  • Football play drawn out on a field

    Easier Done Than Said: Lessons from 6 Years of Preregistration

    Researchers whose preregistered work has appeared in APS journals share their experience with the process.

  • Journal design for APS's Current Directions in Psychological Science.

    New Content From Current Directions in Psychological Science

    A sample of articles on intelligence and mental speed, the link between sexualization and objectification, socioeconomic disparities in education, education and reasoning ability, the connection between social status and health, collective emotions, and the risk for depression.

  • The Psychology of Coronavirus Fear—and How to Manage It

    Let’s start with the obvious: Covid-19, the disease caused by a new strain of coronavirus, is scary. It’s spreading fast, there is currently no vaccine or preventative treatment for it, and we don’t know how deadly it actually is. Under these circumstances, it’s understandable that people would be frightened. But some of the public anxiety exhibited in the past weeks has been disproportionate to the risk posed by Covid-19 as we understand it today. Globally, about 3,500 people have died of the disease since the outbreak began in the fall of 2019.

  • The Psychology Behind Why Toilet Paper, of All Things, Is the Latest Coronavirus Panic Buy

    Masks were the first to go. Then, hand sanitizers.Now, novel coronavirus panic buyers are snatching up ... toilet paper? Retailers in the US and Canada have started limiting the number of toilet paper packs customers can buy in one trip. Some supermarkets in the UK are sold out. Grocery stores in Australia have hired security guards to patrol customers. An Australian newspaper went so far as printing eight extra pages in a recent edition -- emergency toilet paper, the newspaper said, should Aussies run out. Why? Toilet paper does not offer special protection against the virus. It's not considered a staple of impending emergencies, like milk and bread are.

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