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psychology

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    Health Your Morning Cup Might Be Rewiring Your Brain—Through Your Gut

    You reach for your morning coffee not just for the caffeine kick, but because something about that first cup just feels good. New research published in Nature Communications has finally uncovered what's really happening: your coffee is reshaping your gut microbiome, which in turn is talking...
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    Are We Loving Our Children Too Much? What Science Says About Overparenting

    A sweeping new meta-analysis draws a clear line between helicopter parenting and rising rates of anxiety and depression in young people — but the story is more nuanced than it first appears. Every generation of parents wants to do better than the last. We hover over homework, negotiate with...
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    When Control Backfires: What Your Beliefs About Emotions Are Doing to Your Child

    New research reveals that a parent's unspoken attitude toward emotional expression — not just their actions — can quietly shape a child's well-being and the bond they share. Introduction Picture a common scene: your child bursts into tears over a minor frustration, or flies into a rage...
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    Happiness Wealthier Doesn't Mean Happier: The New Measure Reshuffling the Global Happiness Rankings

    A groundbreaking study reveals that some of the world's richest nations are failing their citizens — while poorer countries quietly thrive Every year, the release of the World Happiness Report triggers a familiar ritual. Pundits celebrate the Nordic countries at the top of the rankings...
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    Your Brain Knew You'd Be Friends Before You Even Met

    New neuroscience research suggests the roots of friendship run deeper than shared hobbies or happy accidents — they may be wired into the brain itself. You know that feeling of instant connection with a stranger — the sense that you're simply on the same wavelength? Science may have just...
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    The Harsh World Myth: Why Parents Are Wrong to Raise Kids on Worst-Case Thinking

    You want the best for your child. So you warn them. The world is dangerous, people can't be trusted, and life will disappoint them if they're not prepared. It feels responsible — even loving. But a growing body of psychological research suggests this well-meaning instinct may be quietly...
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    Personality Wired to Feel: Inside the Brains of Highly Sensitive People

    A landmark neuroimaging study finally shows what happens in the brain when an emotionally sensitive person encounters another's joy or sadness Have you ever met someone who tears up at a stranger's smile, or feels physically drained after a crowded party — not because they're anxious or shy...
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    Intelligence Violent behaviour decreases as IQ rises

    Association between intelligence quotient and violence perpetration in the English general population A 2019 study published in Psychological Medicine examined the relationship between intelligence and violence perpetration in the general English population. Conducted by Louis Jacob, Josep...
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    Personality Beyond Good and Evil: New Research Reveals Three Distinct Personality Profiles

    Most of us like to think we're fundamentally good people — but a new study published in Personality and Individual Differences (2026) suggests that human moral personality is more nuanced than a simple good-versus-bad divide. Researchers from Deakin University, Columbia University, and the...
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    Why some political "virtue signaling" may really be status competition

    A new study argues that a lot of public moral and political talk is not just about beliefs or values, but also about status. The authors call this moral grandstanding — meaning the use of moral or political language to make oneself look admirable, important, or superior in front of others. That...
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    Intelligence Your Brain's Strengths Are More Genetic Than You Think — New Study

    Most of us have an intuitive sense that people differ not just in how "smart" they are overall, but in their specific cognitive strengths and weaknesses — some people are gifted at math, others at language, others at rapid processing. But how much of that profile is inherited? A major 2022...
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    High-tech AI Models Are Designed to Tell You What You Want to Hear — A New Study Proves It

    We've all suspected it. Now there's peer-reviewed evidence. A study published in Science — co-authored by researchers at Stanford and Carnegie Mellon — found that today's most popular AI assistants systematically validate users, even when those users are clearly wrong. The paper, led by PhD...
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    Personality Young people's personalities are changing

    I found this on X. It's based on an article from the Financial Times: The troubling decline in conscientiousness The charts are interesting on so many levels. People over 60 years old tend to have stable personalities, apart on the extroversion scale, which has seen a decline for all age...
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    Religion Religiously active Americans more likely to vote at elections

    With the looming US presidential election, I thought it would be interesting to post about an important trend in US politics, namely that religiously active people are considerably more likely to vote than the the inactive and unaffiliated. This trend was identified by Pew Research in 2019. In...
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    Health AI now able to diagnose mental-health conditions better than psychiatrists

    Here is another way artificial intelligence could soon revolutionise healthcare. The Economist: AI offers an intriguing new way to diagnose mental-health conditions In summary: AI tools are being developed to diagnose mental-health conditions by analyzing speech patterns, which can detect...
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    Religion Harvard study finds that brain damage is linked to religious fundamentalism

    A new study suggests a link between brain damage and increased religious fundamentalism. The study involved analyzing brain lesions in two groups: veterans and rural Iowa patients with brain injuries. The research found an overlap in brain areas associated with religious fundamentalism...
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    Society Maps of prevalent negative emotions by country in and around Europe

    When comparing countries and cultures, few people think of the fact that the frequency of basic emotions can vary widely depending on the society where one lives. Using Gallup's State of the Global Workplace: 2022 Report I created maps showing the percentage of respondents that felt anger...
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    Selection of my most popular forum topics

    Genetics Percentage of genetic similarity between humans and animals Genetic inheritance: why people can be closer to one parent than the other genetically How adventurers, outcasts and remainers shape the evolution of society Are humans genetically programmed to live in hierarchical...
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    Health Childhood exposure to lead linked to less agreeable and conscientious adults

    The abundance and malleability of lead has made it a prime material to use as pipes since ancient times. The word plumbing itself comes from the Latin word for lead (plumbum, hence Pb for the chemical symbol). Yet it has been known for decades that lead was toxic, especially for the brain, and...
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    Would you support another country's team in football?

    It's the Euro 2020 and discussion in another thread made me wonder whether most people systematically cheered their own country's team, or if they could have a different favourite team, either because they like the players better, or because they may not feel bound to imperatively support the...
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