2016 Research News
November
November 15, 2016 – from phys.org
November 1, 2016 – from Science Daily
Orgasm is all about rhythmic timing
October
October 26, 2016 – from The Chronicle of Higher Education
The unusual candidacy and personality of Donald Trump have caused some mental-health experts to question the wisdom of the so-called Goldwater rule, which bars psychiatrists from offering professional opinions on public figures they have not examined in person.
October 13, 2016 – from NCBI
August
August 22, 2016 – from Association of Psychology Science
August 18, 2016 – from The Conversation
July
July 30, 2016 – from The Guardian
Despite Republicans urging Trump to be more congenial, his behavior only becomes more erratic – Dan P McAdams says there are three reasons
July 18, 2016 – from Frontiers in Psychology
July 18, 2016 – from NORTHWESTERN NOW
New study reveals that even before infants can talk, language shapes their cognition
July 7, 2016 – from Association for Psychological Science
July 6, 2016 – from Association for Psychology Science
June
June 22, 2016 – from The CUT
June 21, 2016 – from NORTHWESTERN ENGINEERING NEWS
Structure-mapping engine enables computers to reason and learn like humans, including solving moral dilemmas
June 1, 2016 – from The Atlantic
Narcissism, disagreeableness, grandiosity—a psychologist investigates how Trump’s extraordinary personality might shape his possible presidency.
May
May 23, 2016 – from Eureka Alert
New evidence reveals powerful role of experience in linking language and cognition in infants
May 19, 2016 – from Yahoo News
May 17, 2016 – from The Atlantic
A psychology professor looks at the U.S. Republican presidential contender’s views on gender and more.
March
March 16, 2016 – from 13.7 cosmos & culture
March 10, 2016 – from The Conversation
February
February 5, 2016 – from Frontiers in Psychology
February 2, 2016 – from Daily Best
It’s an idea so prevalent in the gay community that the hook-up app Grindr made it a commandment: No Fats.
January
January 27, 2016 – from NORTHWESTERN NOW
Study suggests a single intervention to reduce risk for both disorders