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  • Video game controller on a vivid green background

    Study Finds No Evidence That More Violent, Difficult Video Games Spur Aggression

    Some of the most popular video games feature violence of some kind — psychological scientists are investigating whether violent in-game behavior actually impacts real-world behavior.

  • New Research From Psychological Science

    A sample of research exploring: rewards, attention, and working memory; testosterone and emotional control in police recruits; and gene-environment interactions linking early adversity and romantic relationships.

  • ‘Emotion detection’ AI is a $20 billion industry. New research says it can’t do what it claims.

    In just a handful of years, the business of emotion detection — using artificial intelligence to identify how people are feeling — has moved beyond the stuff of science fiction to a $20 billion industry. Companies like IBM and Microsoft tout software that can analyze facial expressions and match them to certain emotions, a would-be superpower that companies could use to tell how customers respond to a new product or how a job candidate is feeling during an interview. But a far-reaching review of emotion research finds that the science underlying these technologies is deeply flawed. The problem? You can’t reliably judge how someone feels from what their face is doing.

  • Why Are Area 51 Conspiracy Theories So Popular? Here’s What Psychologists Say

    Here’s hoping there are aliens at Area 51. For one thing: they probably have cool spaceships. For another, the extraterrestrials are said to have arrived in 1947, so if they were going to eat us, they likely would have done so by now. Finally, answer this question: What’s more interesting, a world with aliens or a world without them? Area 51 has been much in the news lately, ever since the June 27 launch of the Facebook page named “Storm Area 51, They Can’t Stop All of Us.” The crowdsourced semi-satirical raid on the secretive Air Force base is scheduled for Sept. 20 at 3:00 a.m.

  • Psychologists proved their value to political campaigns with one fundraising trick

    In the last decade, psychological advisors have gone from an oddity to standard feature of major political campaigns. Back in 2008, when Barack Obama turned to a group of behavioral scientists to help him win the United States presidential election, their worth was yet unproven.  Little is known about the academic group, who were unpaid and rarely give interviews on their political work.

  • I Trust You to Disagree: Caring May Signal Integrity Across Political Lines

    We may perceive those we can trust to disagree with us as having greater integrity than “fence-sitters” who have no strong feelings either way.

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