17 results match your criteria: "Developmental and Educational Psychology"
J Exp Psychol Gen
December 2024
Department of Psychology, Data Science Initiative, Harvard University.
Attach Hum Dev
October 2024
School of Psychology, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.
Forcibly displaced children often face separation from their parents, particularly fathers. These children endure the hardships of war, displacement, and the loss of a key attachment figure. Despite the critical role of attachment in children's well-being during periods of heightened stress, the impact of separation due to war and displacement has received little attention in empirical work.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2024
Booth School of Business, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
U.S. immigration discourse has spurred interest in characterizing who illegalized immigrants are or perceived to be.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerspect Psychol Sci
January 2025
Data Science Initiative, Harvard University.
Faces are socially important surfaces of the body on which various meanings are attached. The widespread physiognomic belief that faces inherently contain socially predictive value is why they make a generative stimulus for perception research. However, critical problems arise in studies that simultaneously investigate faces and race.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Psychol
February 2023
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
It remains unexplained why some behaviours persist despite being non-hedonic and ostensibly aversive. This phenomenon is especially baffling when such behaviours are taken to excess in the form of psychopathology. Anorexia nervosa is one psychiatric disorder in which effortful behaviours that most people find unpleasant (suchas restrictive eating) are persistently performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vis
June 2023
Jena University Hospital, Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany.
In this exploratory study, we asked whether objective statistical image properties can predict subjective aesthetic ratings for a set of 48 abstract paintings created by the artist Robert Pepperell. Ruta and colleagues (2021) used the artworks previously to study the effect of curved/angular contour on liking and wanting decisions. We related a predefined set of statistical image properties to the eight different dimensions of aesthetic judgments from their study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Psychol
March 2023
School of Psychology, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Over the past two decades, citizens' political rights and civil liberties have declined globally. Psychological science can play an instrumental role in both explaining and combating the authoritarian impulses that underlie these attacks on personal autonomy. In this Review, we describe the psychological processes and situational factors that foster authoritarianism, as well as the societal consequences of its apparent resurgence within the general population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Psychol
September 2022
UCL Policy Lab, University College London, London, UK.
There is little comprehensive research into autistic adulthood, and even less into the services and supports that are most likely to foster flourishing adult autistic lives. This limited research is partly because autism is largely conceived as a condition of childhood, but this focus of research has also resulted from the orthodox scientific approach to autism, which conceptualizes autistic experience almost entirely as a series of biologically derived functional deficits. Approaching autism in this way severely limits what is known about this neurodevelopmental difference, how research is conducted and the services and supports available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Psychol
June 2022
School of Psychological Science, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
Two adolescent mental health fields - sleep and depression - have advanced largely in parallel until about four years ago. Although sleep problems have been thought to be a symptom of adolescent depression, emerging evidence suggests that sleep difficulties arise before depression does. In this Review, we describe how the combination of adolescent sleep biology and psychology uniquely predispose adolescents to develop depression.
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January 2022
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Despite a noisy and ever-changing visual world, our perceptual experience seems remarkably stable over time. How does our visual system achieve this apparent stability? Here, we introduce a previously unknown visual illusion that shows direct evidence for an online mechanism continuously smoothing our percepts over time. As a result, a continuously seen physically changing object can be misperceived as unchanging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Sci
February 2021
Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
Scholars from across the social and media sciences have issued a clarion call to address a recent resurgence in criminalized characterizations of immigrants. Do these characterizations meaningfully impact individuals' beliefs about immigrants and immigration? Across two online convenience samples (total = 1,054 adult U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPers Individ Dif
December 2020
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Recent research suggests the validity of the construct of Left-wing Authoritarianism (LWA). Like its well-studied parallel construct Right-wing Authoritarianism, LWA is characterized by dogmatism, punitive attitudes toward dissenters, and desire for strong authority figures. In contrast to RWA, LWA mobilizes these traits on behalf of left-wing values (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Cogn
April 2020
Karl Franzens University Graz, Institute of Catechetic and Pedagogic of Religion, Graz, Austria.
The topic of belief has been neglected in the natural sciences for a long period of time. Recent neuroscience research in non-human primates and humans, however, has shown that beliefs are the neuropsychic product of fundamental brain processes that attribute affective meaning to concrete objects and events, enabling individual goal setting, decision making and maneuvering in the environment. With regard to the involved neural processes they can be categorized as empirical, relational, and conceptual beliefs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Res Methods
August 2020
Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Identifying relative idiosyncratic and shared contributions to judgments is a fundamental challenge to the study of human behavior, yet there is no established method for estimating these contributions. Using edge cases of stimuli varying in intrarater reliability and interrater agreement-faces (high on both), objects (high on the former, low on the latter), and complex patterns (low on both)-we showed that variance component analyses (VCAs) accurately captured the psychometric properties of the data (Study 1). Simulations showed that the VCA generalizes to any arbitrary continuous rating and that both sample and stimulus set size affect estimate precision (Study 2).
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November 2017
UC Berkeley, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Recent experiments have shown that visual cognition blends current input with that from the recent past to guide ongoing decision making. This serial dependence appears to exploit the temporal autocorrelation normally present in visual scenes to promote perceptual stability. While this benefit has been assumed, evidence that serial dependence directly alters stimulus perception has been limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Neurosci
May 2014
1] Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA. [2] Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA. [3] Vision Science Group, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
Visual input often arrives in a noisy and discontinuous stream, owing to head and eye movements, occlusion, lighting changes, and many other factors. Yet the physical world is generally stable; objects and physical characteristics rarely change spontaneously. How then does the human visual system capitalize on continuity in the physical environment over time? We found that visual perception in humans is serially dependent, using both prior and present input to inform perception at the present moment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
March 2015
ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders Sydney, NSW, Australia ; School of Psychology, Cardiff University Cardiff, UK.
Over the past decades, delusions have become the subject of growing and productive research spanning clinical and cognitive neurosciences. Despite this, the nature of belief, which underpins the construct of delusions, has received little formal investigation. No account of delusions, however, would be complete without a cognitive level analysis of belief per se.
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