A recent study conducted by researchers at UCLA and published in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology has revealed that individuals with alcohol use disorder who experienced significant stress or ...
A series of studies in the United States and on the island of Taiwan found that people suppress their positive emotions less often than they suppress their negative emotions. However, suppression of ...
A recent study published in AJOB Neuroscience found that a majority of Americans support psilocybin, a psychedelic compound from certain mushrooms, for supervised medical treatment and well-being ...
A recent study published in JAMA Network Open introduces an advanced machine-learning model that predicts autism spectrum disorder in young children using limited information, with nearly 80% accuracy ...
New findings from the 2020 presidential election show that women voters are far from a political monolith, with attitudes toward race and gender strongly linked to their choices at the ballot box. The ...
A recent study has shown that voters are more likely to believe vote counts are accurate when election results are monitored by a range of different officials, including government election workers, ...
A recent study published in Frontiers in Psychology offers new insights into how testosterone might affect men’s interpretations of women’s social signals. Researchers found that testosterone ...
A recent study published in the British Journal of Social Psychology suggests that people seen as kind and helpful are also perceived as more physically attractive. This effect, seen across various ...
A recent study published in Frontiers in Psychology has found that individuals who undergo jaw surgery for jaw deformities may experience improvements in self-perception and a heightened sensitivity ...
New research published in The Humanistic Psychologist introduces the Five-Factor Personality Assessment System (FFPAS), a novel method for individualizing psychological assessments. The five-factor ...
A new study sheds light on how political power influences ideological prejudice in the United States, revealing that people’s ideological bias against opposing beliefs intensifies when their own party ...
A recent study published in Injury Epidemiology finds that the size of a person’s social network may be linked to their support for political violence in the United States. According to findings, ...