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Author Archives: Michael Daniel
Friday Factoid: Altruism
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Why do we do good things for others? Altruism is the concept of unselfish concern for the welfare of others. It turns out that we might be willing to do good things for … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns, Friday Factoids
Tagged Altruism, Gain, social psychology
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Friday Factoid: Prosopagnosia
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Some people are not able to recognize people by looking at their faces. It is a condition called prosopagnosia, and individuals with this condition often rely on other cues, such as voices, to … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns, Friday Factoids
Tagged Occipitotemporal lobe, Prosopagnosia
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Friday Factoid: Change Blindness
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Did you know that people have a tendency to overlook or “ignore” changes to their environment, even big ones, when there is something that disrupts a person’s vision for just an instant? People … Continue reading
Friday Factoid: Groupthink
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Why do people seem to make poor decisions when they are with a group? Groupthink is something that can occur when members of a group go along with the group’s choice without thinking … Continue reading
Friday Factoid: Infantile Amnesia
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Do you remember your 1st birthday… Me neither. There is a reason for this. Typically developing people will experience something called infantile or childhood amnesia, which is the inability of adults to recall … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns, Friday Factoids
Tagged Childhood amnesia, Infantile amnesia, Memory
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Friday Factoid: Superstition and Behaviorism
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Why do we have to wear the same socks to every baseball game? What makes us have superstitions, or unjustified beliefs in supernatural causes, for the outcome of different events. According to behavioral … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns, Friday Factoids
Tagged Behavioral psychology, Skinner, Superstition
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Friday Factoids: The Homunculus
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern You have a tiny human in your brain. In a typically developing brain, individuals have sections of the brain that map onto the different parts of the body. Your brain has neurological maps … Continue reading
Friday Factoid: Conquering Quarantine Fatigue
Rebecca Girlinghouse, MA WKPIC Doctoral Intern Back in May, I began noticing the term “quarantine fatigue” being thrown around on the internet. As shelter-in-place orders were reaching 30 days in many places, people were beginning to feel drained, irritable, … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns, Friday Factoids
Tagged coping, Coronavirus, COVID-19, Quarantine fatigue
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Friday Factoid: Racial Differences and Psychotropic Prescriptions
Sarah Watts, MS WKPIC Doctoral Intern Are there racial differences in the way psychotropic medication is prescribed to youth who are suffering from mental health problems? In today’s society it is important to explore the social and biological basis … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns, Friday Factoids
Tagged Prescriptions, Psychotropics, Racial Differences
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Article Review: Ferrando, S.J., et al. (2020). COVID-19 psychosis: A potential new neuropsychiatric condition triggered by novel coronavirus infection and the inflammatory response?
Rebecca Girlinghouse, MA WKPIC Doctoral Intern The authors of this study sought to bring awareness to cases in which COVID-19 positive patients developed new-onset symptoms of psychosis. They explained some hospitals have been reporting cases in which COVID-19 positive … Continue reading
Posted in Blog, Current Interns
Tagged Central Nervous System, Coronavirus, COVID-19, psychosis
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