-
The paper was published in April in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, and written about recently in a British newspaper, the Mail Online.
FORBES: Why Gossip Is Good For The Office
-
The study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, contradicts the idea that being under pressure leads to bad habits like over-eating or shopping sprees.
BBC: People under stress stick to habits, good or bad
-
When researchers tried to lift the grades of struggling college students by raising their self-esteem, the students' grades got worse, according to a 2007 study of 86 students published in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology.
WSJ: The Right Level of Self-Esteem for a Child
-
The study was published online in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.
FORBES: Study: More Violent Video Game Play Results in More Aggression
-
Research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology suggests that we grossly underestimate just how willing others are to help us out ( PsyBlog).
FORBES: How To Ask For What You Want -- And Get It All
-
New research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology suggests that presidents and psychopaths share a psychological trait that may shed light on what made Teddy such a unique character.
FORBES: What Makes Presidents and Psychopaths Similar?
-
In a 2009 study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, David Lubinski and his team at Vanderbilt found that in a sample of academically gifted young adults, women became less career-oriented than men over time.
WSJ: Emily Esfahani Smith: Find a Man Today, Graduate Tomorrow
-
In a 2005 study from the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, people who wrote one-sentence e-mails were supremely overconfident in both their ability to communicate and their ability to detect sarcasm, seriousness, anger and sadness over e-mail.
CNN: A call to pick up the phone
-
The research -- due to appear in the forthcoming Journal of Personality and Social Psychology -- also found that a person's influence was not affected by how much others liked them.
CNN: Study: Bullying bosses dominate their way to power
-
The study was published in the journal Social Psychology and Personality Science, and headed up by two male researchers from The University of Southern California and Duke University.
FORBES: Botox Might Make You Less Empathetic. So What?