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  • Next Week: APS Fellows Featured in Upcoming NIH Webinars on Social Aggression, Data-driven Ontologies

    The National Institutes of Health are featuring the work of APS Fellows in upcoming webinars and lecture series that will be broadcast online. On Monday, August 20, at 1:00 PM ET, APS Fellow Russell A. Poldrack will present in the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR) Director’s Webinar titled “Toward data-driven ontologies for mental function.” Register for the webinar by clicking here. On Tuesday, August 21, at 10:00 AM ET, APS Fellow Marion K.

  • Are first impressions really accurate?

    Fictional stories are replete with villains and heroes with an almost magical ability to discern other people’s characters – think Hannibal Lecter or Sherlock Holmes. In real life, too, many people (including certain world leaders) seem to think they have this skill. Question-and-answer sites like Quora are filled with posts like: “I can read people’s personalities and emotions like a book. Is this normal? But do any of us really have an exceptional skill for judging other people’s personalities? Psychologists call such people – or the idea of them – “good judges”. And for more than a century, they have been trying to answer the question of whether these good judges really exist.

  • In Sesame’s New Show, To Play Is To Learn

    Turn on your TV and surf the stuff meant for kids. I dare you. You'll likely find a surfeit of fast action and fart jokes. And that's what makes Esme & Roy so unusual. The new show, about an unlikely duo who babysit monsters, is Sesame Workshop's first animated children's program in more than a decade, and it deftly combines the Workshop's parallel passions — for learning and play. In fact, Esme & Roy is dedicated to an idea that can feel radical these days: That learning and play aren't parallel at all. When done right, they should converge, each in service of the other.

  • ‘An anxious nation’: Barnes & Noble sees a surge in sales of books about stress

    Yes, modern life in America is ... a lot. Psychologists say they’ve seen the toll it’s taken on people, and surprisingly so has Barnes & Noble. Sales of books related to anxiety rose 26 percent in June from a year ago at the bookseller. Liz Harwell, its senior director of merchandising, said the company had never seen a comparable increase in book sales related to anxiety.

  • White threat in a browning America

    In 2008, Barack Obama held up change as a beacon, attaching to it another word, a word that channeled everything his young and diverse coalition saw in his rise and their newfound political power: hope. An America that would elect a black man president was an America in which a future was being written that would read thrillingly different from our past. In 2016, Donald Trump wielded that same sense of change as a threat; he was the revanchist voice of those who yearned to make America the way it was before, to make it great again.

  • Are rich people more likely to lie, cheat, steal? Science explains the world of Manafort and Gates.

    What is about money that makes people do bad things? It seems a fair question when the news is dominated by misdeeds of the rich and powerful. The Paul Manafort trial, now entering its third week, has revealed details of his alleged crimes: defrauding banks out of tens of millions of dollars, evading taxes by stashing huge sums in offshore accounts and using riches earned through unregistered work for foreign governments to buy $15,000 ostrich and python jackets. Manafort’s deputy Rick Gates testified about the small fortune he embezzled and spent on his globe-trotting infidelities. Also last week, Rep. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.) was charged with insider trading.

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