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The Risky Choices of Modern Life
A new study compiles an inventory of the 100 most common risky choices of everyday life, creating a framework that scientists can use to study risk and uncertainty in the modern world.
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New Clinical Psychological Science Editor Aims to Break Down Barriers to Care
“A strong CPS paper is both meticulous and imaginative. Rigor and transparency are nonnegotiable—clear reporting, reproducible analyses, and careful reasoning remain the foundation of credible science.”
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Unconscious Cognitive Processes May Fuel Election Fraud Beliefs
A new study shows that how we process information, in addition to party allegiances, can contribute to beliefs of vote tampering.
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New AMPPS Editor Strives to Build on Legacy of Transparency and Accountability
At the start of the new year, Felix Thoemmes will take over APS’s journal Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science (AMPPS) as the next editor-in-chief. Thoemmes is an associate professor and chair in
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Is Overconfidence Avoidable?
New research examines overconfidence among tournament chess players to investigate if it is prevalent in an environment that should discourage it.
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Latest Cattell Sabbatical Researchers Will Focus on Animal Cognition, Child Development, and Emotion
Three researchers will receive support this year from the Sabbatical Fund Fellowship from the James McKeen Cattell Fund.