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  • 2018 Anxiety and Depression Conference

    The Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA) is announcing its 2018 conference to be held April 5–8, 2018, in Washington DC. The ADAA is a multidisciplinary professional organization that works with mental health experts specializing in anxiety, depression, obsessive-compulsion, and trauma-related disorders. Their work focuses on evidence-based treatments and best practices for training and education. For more information on the conference, please click here.

  • Full length shot of a young female student studying at home

    Thinking Strategically About Study Resources Boosts Students’ Final Grades

    College students who reflected about how to best use classroom resources had higher final grades relative to their peers.

  • Does Keeping Salaries Secret Hurt Team Performance?

    New research suggests that keeping salaries secret can stifle employee motivation and performance.

  • Could Solving This One Problem Solve All the Others?

    Freakonomics: Our latest Freakonomics Radio episode is called “Could Solving This One Problem Solve All the Others?” The biggest problem with humanity is humans themselves. Too often, we make choices — what we eat, how we spend our money and time — that undermine our well-being. An all-star team of academic researchers thinks it has the solution: perfecting the science of behavior change. Will it work? Below is a transcript of the episode, modified for your reading pleasure. For more information on the people and ideas in the episode, see the links at the bottom of this post. And you’ll find credits for the music in the episode noted within the transcript. Read the whole story: Freakonomics

  • A California Court for Young Adults Calls on Science

    The New York Times: On a cloudy afternoon in the Bayview district, Shaquille, 21, was riding in his sister’s 1991 Acura when another car ran a stop sign, narrowly missing them. Both cars screeched to a halt, and Shaquille and the other driver got out. “I just wanted to talk,” he recalls. But the talk became an argument, and the argument ended when Shaquille sent the other driver to the pavement with a left hook. Later that day, he was arrested and charged with felony assault. He already had a misdemeanor assault conviction — for a fight in a laundromat when he was 19. This time he might land in prison. ...

  • Beacons help Waze users navigate Pittsburgh’s tricky tunnel exits

    Marketplace: Even before reliance on GPS, tunnel driving has been difficult for drivers. “As you go from light to dark, you have a momentary adjustment of the lighting in your eye, the responses of the photo-receptors in your eye,” said Roberta Klatzky, who teaches psychology and human computer interaction at Carnegie Mellon University. “Its like when you go into a dark theater, at first you don’t see anything, then you can see the people all around you in their seats.” Klatzky said our minds are trying to compute speed and choices — the more there are, the harder it is to choose one. And it’s more confusing when reliance on a faulty GPS enters the picture.

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