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Psychology

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  • 1 Oct 2020
    Jeffrey A. Hall

    Are We Going to Keep in Touch Once This Is Over?

    LAWRENCE, KS— The COVID-19 pandemic has reshaped the way we keep in touch, but will it last when face-to-face conversation is safe again?  I’ve been interviewed dozens of times about my new book, “Relating Through Technology” (Cambridge University Press). Journalists keep asking me, do you think this will transform our habits of mediated connection? My […]

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  • 24 Sep 2020
    David A. Ellis

    Smartphones within Psychological Science

    Smartphones within Psychological Science provides a comprehensive insight into where psychology has benefited, struggled and failed when it comes to understanding or using mobile technologies as part of the research process.    Technological innovation has allowed psychologists to make exciting advances in almost every area of the discipline. Today, researchers across health, social, personality and […]

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  • 1 Sep 2020
    Todd L. Pittinsky, Barbara Kellerman

    Donald Trump and Joe Biden – Would You Believe Two Peas in a Pod?

    The two men could hardly seem any more different. Yes, they are both male and white and Christian and heterosexual and American. They are even approximately the same age. But in that which matters most – character, temperament, personality, and the policies with which they now identify – they are at opposite ends of the […]

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  • 30 Jul 2020
    Lockdown Lectures

    Join us for Lockdown Lectures: a Series of Author Q&As on Remote Teaching

    We asked the authors of some of our most popular textbooks to take part in a series of Facebook Live webinars about teaching remotely.

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  • 24 Jul 2020
    Jeffrey J. Lockman, Catherine S. Tamis-LeMonda

    The Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development

    When we decided to serve as Editors of the forthcoming Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development, we did not want to assemble just a traditional handbook volume.  Sure, we wanted to gather together many of the world’s leading experts on infant development and have them review current findings and foundational theory in their research area.  And […]

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  • 14 Jul 2020
    Fanny M. Cheung, Diane F. Halpern

    Why We Need an International Perspective on the Psychology of Women and Why We Need It Now

    Psychology is way too weird. By that we mean that it is overwhelmingly the study of people who are White, Educated, and live in countries that are Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic. A study of the research participants in one of psychology’s leading journals found that 85% of the samples were representative of fewer than 7% […]

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  • 11 Jun 2020
    Ralph L. Keeney

    Give Yourself a Nudge

    Your decisions collectively empower you to create the life that you desire. If you want to improve your professional skills, enhance a relationship, eat a more healthy diet, contribute more at work, or mentor young people, you need to make decisions. Your decisions turn your plans into reality and improve the quality of your life. […]

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  • 21 May 2020
    Vera Camden

    Psychoanalysis and The Pandemic

    When Freud first glimpsed the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor in 1909, he remarked to Jung, ‘They don’t realize we’re bringing them the plague.’ Freud felt certain the Americans would reject his theories. The double irony in his statement, however, is that though Americans at the turn of the century would resist his […]

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