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1 ectal surgery, neurology, physiotherapy, and psychology).
2 sophers, I accept the unsettling lesson from psychology.
3 forms of diversity, stands to benefit social psychology.
4 ming of findings in personality and clinical psychology.
5 for increasing political diversity in social psychology.
6 d replicated in the Reproducibility Project: Psychology.
7 vative spectrum to the whole field of social psychology.
8 ic and emerging theoretical paradigms within psychology.
9              This is a problem for aesthetic psychology.
10 ntation of political conservatives in social psychology.
11  theoretical power and paradigmatic scope of psychology.
12  suggest possible remedies to bias in social psychology.
13 roscience, occupational health, and clinical psychology.
14 chine learning, artificial intelligence, and psychology.
15 n of human society is deeply nested in human psychology.
16 radiology mainly for psychiatry and clinical psychology.
17 ve profound effects on many aspects of human psychology.
18  I have learned from a rather long career in psychology.
19 known as emerging adulthood in developmental psychology.
20 his prescient contributions to physiological psychology.
21 on physiology and his views on physiological psychology.
22 ningfully within the framework of scientific psychology.
23 es new ways of thinking about every topic in psychology.
24 e have long been subjects of study in social psychology.
25 ectrochemistry, neurobiology, and behavioral psychology.
26  was lower in cognitive neuroscience than in psychology.
27 ems engineering (CSE), and applied cognitive psychology.
28 dical Imaging, Neuroscience, Physiology, and Psychology.
29 esearch questions spanning multiple areas of psychology.
30  are currently being applied across areas of psychology.
31 c in educational, social, and organizational psychology.
32 diversity have received limited attention in psychology.
33 he exciting early developments of scientific psychology, 2) considerably less brain-centric, and 3) n
34         Maestripieri et al. pit evolutionary psychology against social psychological and economic per
35 Selfish Goal Theory with modern evolutionary psychology amplifies theoretical power.
36 tilevel wayfinding research in environmental psychology and architecture exhibits a strong compatibil
37 hanisms might play a role in influencing the psychology and behavior of people from deprived backgrou
38 , considering work from cognitive and social psychology and behavioral economics, but with a particul
39 ned relatively unchanged, although cognitive psychology and behavioral neuroscience have expanded our
40 and Allied Health Literature], PsycINFO, and Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection [PBSC]) wa
41 sly unconsidered factors, informed by social psychology and behavioural economics, can appear as 'sym
42 lligence is a core construct in differential psychology and behavioural genetics, and should be so in
43 reports that individual-level differences in psychology and biology map onto variation in political o
44 s, and is a key topic at the intersection of psychology and biology.
45 ing contribution to our understanding of the psychology and brain mechanisms underlying behavioral in
46 ding animal studies, as well as experimental psychology and clinical studies.
47 ain and advocates for a series of reforms in psychology and cognitive neuroscience.
48 (P&B) propose ways in which this may include psychology and cognitive science.
49 and apply it to resolve two puzzles in human psychology and cultural history: (1) the rise of large-s
50          Throughout, important links between psychology and EBP are highlighted, along with the contr
51                                      Classic psychology and economic studies argue that punishment is
52 requires combining a variety of methods from psychology and economics.
53 commodate individual differences in biology, psychology and environment, and must disentangle cause a
54  found from research in other fields such as psychology and epidemiology.
55 ychiatric disorders has been a major goal of psychology and neuroscience for decades.
56 ograms of research on emotional phenomena in psychology and neuroscience in the past decade.
57    We investigate a question relevant to the psychology and neuroscience of perceptual decision-makin
58                                We review the psychology and neuroscience of reinforcement learning (R
59        A longstanding dichotomy in cognitive psychology and neuroscience pits controlled, top-down dr
60 g dimension in light of findings from social psychology and neuroscience.
61 ults from across sub-disciplines, especially psychology and neuroscience.
62  costs and benefits of memory as outlined in psychology and neuroscience.
63 ientists that the lack of reproducibility in psychology and other fields stems from various methodolo
64  of this article is that an understanding of psychology and other social science disciplines can info
65      Behavioral economics uses evidence from psychology and other social sciences to create a precise
66 ently from the respective fields of positive psychology and preventive cardiology.
67 zing current ideological diversity in social psychology and promoting tolerance of minority views is
68 lics enjoyed a short-lived relationship with psychology and psychiatry.
69 how emotion should be operationalized within psychology and psychiatry.
70 e profitably applied to other areas of music psychology and psychological science in general.
71 ocial Reality reviews the evidence in social psychology and related fields and reaches three (1) Alth
72 (Jussim 2012) reviews the evidence in social psychology and related fields and reaches three conclusi
73 en the focus of a huge volume of research in psychology and related sciences for decades.
74 , psychophysics and vision science, cultural psychology and social cognition, and highlight the main
75 debate across broad fields from evolutionary psychology and social neuroscience to social networking
76 a profound hypothesis in which neuroscience, psychology and theory of computation are now deeply root
77      This quantity, often known as reward in psychology and utility in economics, is usually conceptu
78 s studies, evolutionary neurobiology, animal psychology, and anesthesiology.
79         Based on evidence from developmental psychology, and behavioral and clinical neuroscience, we
80 an area of intense research in neuroscience, psychology, and computer science.
81 plore how theodiversity in turn shapes human psychology, and discuss three cultural dimensions of rel
82 erest from the fields of biology, economics, psychology, and ecology about how decision costs decreas
83 constructivism, social psychology, cognitive psychology, and evolutionary psychology, which are often
84 approaches from phenomenological psychiatry, psychology, and medical humanities.
85 er-choice, ownership intuitions, coalitional psychology, and more.
86 ber of different ways in both philosophy and psychology, and most controversy has centered on its sel
87 undation Trust, and Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College London.
88 g the lack of replicability in neuroscience, psychology, and other related fields.
89 evelop a new, action-oriented vocabulary for psychology, and recognize that higher-order cognitive pr
90 ach exemplified by contemporary evolutionary psychology; and lay out some new and hopefully interesti
91 rt supply and will not arrive to save social psychology any time soon.
92                                Instead, this psychology appears intricately designed to capture socia
93 r political diversity in the ranks of social psychology are apt, their discussion of the decline in s
94 sed, the autonomy and irreducibility of folk psychology are assured.
95 for increasing political diversity in social psychology are based on mischaracterizations of social p
96 re less apparent when the insights of social psychology are pitted against the insights from other so
97           This is the first Annual Review of Psychology article on the topic, and it offers a review
98 doing so, they risk positioning evolutionary psychology as an antagonistic subdisciplinary enterprise
99 ccount for a phenomenon well known in social psychology as biased assimilation: When presented with m
100  are based on mischaracterizations of social psychology as fundamentally flawed in understanding ster
101 linary programme integrating linguistics and psychology as part of the cognitive sciences of language
102 identified by evolutionary and developmental psychology as well as research on empathy.
103  for improving political diversity in social psychology, as well as in other areas of the academy.
104 e) from biology, engineering, economics, and psychology at 371 universities/colleges from 50 US state
105                              Socioecological psychology attempts to bring the objectivist perspective
106                          We tested whether a psychology-based personal initiative training approach,
107 schools, including from sociology and social psychology, behind such a pragmatic and theoretically ne
108 nother meeting place for quantum physics and psychology, both within and outside of cognitive modelin
109 ight to worry about political bias in social psychology but they underestimate the ease of correcting
110  infuse not only the discipline of cognitive psychology, but all societal accounts of the person.
111 t we need more political diversity in social psychology, but contend that we need more religious dive
112  optimism, that are a core focus of positive psychology, but have largely been neglected in preventiv
113  some high profile results---most notably in psychology, but in many other disciplines as well---cann
114 rk can be usefully integrated with narrative psychology by situating personal narratives at the top o
115 cludes by discussing how an understanding of psychology can also inform the use and design of traditi
116                          An understanding of psychology can also lead to the development of different
117 s and analogies of critical aspects of human psychology can be found in diverse nonhuman taxa.
118        Our model illustrates how dual-system psychology can be incorporated into population-level evo
119 tion of a particular, genetically controlled psychology causing individuals to interfere in a bully-v
120 nge of domains, from mainstream experimental psychology (cognition, perception, social behavior) to c
121 s behaviorism, social constructivism, social psychology, cognitive psychology, and evolutionary psych
122 psychologists might offer the broader social psychology community guidance in neutralizing some of th
123 put forward a challenge to the developmental psychology community to consider the development of comp
124  psychological anthropology and evolutionary psychology contributes both methodological and empirical
125 th the 10 highest impact factors in clinical psychology, criminology, education, and social work.
126           Using the Reproducibility Project: Psychology data, both optimistic and pessimistic conclus
127 harmful effects of political homogeneity for psychology depend upon conservatives disclosing their po
128          The success of a future sentimental psychology depends on whether "sentiment" can be delimit
129  diversity and interrogating the taxonomy of psychology; describe the ways in which neural reuse can
130 theoretic analyses typically conclude that a psychology designed for direct reciprocity should defect
131                             We discuss how a psychology designed for such an ecology may be expected
132 estion, and his misconstrual of evolutionary psychology devalues an influential paradigm that promise
133 , Kraepelin's early emphasis on experimental psychology did not bear the expected fruit.
134 cial ecology (e.g., population density) with psychology (e.g., prosocial behavior), (b) process studi
135 is an association between social ecology and psychology (e.g., residential mobility --> anxiety --> f
136  back to influential views in philosophy and psychology (e.g., William James), definitive experimenta
137 onomics integrates concepts and methods from psychology, economics, and cognitive neuroscience to und
138 aws on evidence from a range of disciplines (psychology, economics, and public health nutrition) to d
139 ery and from other pertinent research areas (psychology, education, business) was reviewed looking fo
140 ocative article, it is time for evolutionary psychology (EP) to be incorporated into clinical and edu
141  intentional change by unifying evolutionary psychology (EP) with the standard social science model;
142 , medical and gynecologic oncology, clinical psychology, epidemiology, genomics, cost-effectiveness m
143                                Environmental psychology examines transactions between individuals and
144                                          The Psychology Experimental Building Language http://pebl.so
145          Lankford overgeneralizes individual psychology from limited, fragmentary and doubtful materi
146  coping intervention delivered by supervised psychology graduates, or treatment as usual (TAU).
147                                     Academic psychology has become increasingly non-diverse political
148                              Although social psychology has considered these two domains as orthogona
149                                    Cognitive psychology has demonstrated that many instances of false
150                 An influential literature in psychology has developed the theory that self-control re
151                           However, cognitive psychology has established that recollection is not a ve
152                         We argue that social psychology has unique potential for advancing understand
153                               However, moral psychology has yet to incorporate the study of social ne
154                              Many studies in psychology have documented how the behaviour of verbally
155  and studies in cognitive science and social psychology have long hypothesized that the brain needs t
156 ories and experimental paradigms from social psychology, have begun to elucidate the neural mechanism
157    Findings in behavioral science, including psychology, have influenced policies and reforms in many
158 atry clerkship (odds ratio=2.66), a major in psychology in college (odds ratio=2.58), and valuing wor
159 f viewpoint diversity is lacking in academic psychology in general and social psychology in particula
160 in academic psychology in general and social psychology in particular: political diversity.
161 f the most controversial topics of cognitive psychology in recent years.
162 ences, including the developmental cognitive psychology in which the argument here is couched.
163 te a diverse body of tasks from experimental psychology including the Stroop, Switching, Flanker, Sim
164 d incorporate broader constructs from social psychology, including emotions and values hierarchies.
165 cend traditional conceptual levels in social psychology, including experience and recognition of emot
166 nce Collaboration's Reproducibility Project: Psychology indicates high reproducibility, given the stu
167        Evidence from moral and developmental psychology indicates that decision making results from a
168                              Socioecological psychology investigates humans' cognitive, emotional, an
169 and how societal structures shape individual psychology is a foundational question of the social scie
170                                              Psychology is a potent tool for understanding the extern
171 agree with Duarte et al. that bias in social psychology is a serious problem that researchers should
172 ogically homogeneous discipline of political psychology is a serious problem.
173     We examine these key points: Brunswikian psychology is absent in UTT; research on self-insight di
174  Connecting labor economics and evolutionary psychology is laudable, but mating motives do not explai
175 nderrepresentation of non-liberals in social psychology is most likely due to a combination of self-s
176                                       Social psychology is not a very politically diverse area of inq
177 get article, we made four claims: (1) Social psychology is now politically homogeneous; (2) this homo
178 recently reported low replication success in psychology is realistic, and worse performance may be ex
179     Our results illustrate how evolved human psychology is sensitive to the costs and benefits of bot
180 we suspect that its impact on physiology and psychology is so remote that its predictive power disint
181 most important recent developments in social psychology is the discovery of minor interventions that
182                                 Evolutionary psychology is the second wave of the cognitive revolutio
183           If the orthodoxy is right, and the psychology is to be believed, people characteristically
184                  More non-liberals in social psychology is unlikely to speed our convergence upon the
185 lassical (probabilistic) determinism, and in psychology it is known as the issue of selective influen
186                    Whilst not eschewing folk psychology, it is useful to re-examine dictionary defini
187 ibility of 44 studies published in prominent psychology journals and replicated in the Reproducibilit
188 tion attempt of 100 studies published in top psychology journals found that only 39% could be unambig
189  first four 2013 issues of 12 psychiatry and psychology journals.
190 ing, ethics, organ donation and procurement, psychology, law, and sociology.
191 supported by extensive evidence in cognitive psychology, linguistics, and philosophy.
192 2015) investigate a classic observation from psychology linking arousal state with behavioral perform
193 ly identified in business and organizational psychology literature including self-justification, acco
194                                    Cognitive psychology literature leads us to expect underreporting,
195  The present review organizes the vocational psychology literature published between 2007 and 2014 in
196 o the first and second topic, and the social psychology literature to the third topic.
197 pic has become increasingly prominent in the psychology literature.
198 ntage of medical students with undergraduate psychology majors and providing an exemplary psychiatry
199 ience, economics, communication science, and psychology, make assumptions about processes that involv
200                                 In intuitive psychology, many inferences proceed without detailed cau
201                For decades methodologists in psychology, marketing, education, and survey research ha
202                                Environmental psychology matters.
203 the history of political diversity in social psychology may be better characterized by stability than
204 ractive approaches to development and social psychology may particularly benefit from the non-dualist
205 , rehabilitation, psychiatry, and behavioral psychology may prevent depression in this population.
206 probe task is a well-established paradigm in psychology, measuring emotional attention through reacti
207 nalysed using grounded theory and discursive psychology methods.
208 ns their proposal has to offer developmental psychology more generally.
209  space and time, and (2) although scientific psychology must be heavily revised, the autonomy and irr
210 paradigms for assessing the self, drawn from psychology, neuroeconomics, embodied cognition, and soci
211 e ways in which my proposals for integrating psychology, neuroscience, and evolutionary biology diffe
212 de-offs should be a priority for psychiatry, psychology, neuroscience, and genetics.
213 his article, I review literature from social psychology, neuroscience, management, and animal researc
214 olitical bias has indeed been a distorter of psychology, not just in particular research areas but in
215                        They understand group psychology, observe, analyze assumptions, decide, and im
216 elf-control, together with insights from the psychology of (perceived and actual) scarcity, might hel
217 f contextual awareness into the study of the psychology of art appreciation, I raise two concerns.
218  outlines a framework for thinking about the psychology of behavior change in the context of market f
219 wth of interest in both the neuroscience and psychology of curiosity.
220 target article stresses the neurobiology and psychology of dreams, this commentary emphasizes that th
221                                          The psychology of extinction has been studied for decades.
222 discussion of different types of groups; the psychology of group-level traits; the uses and limitatio
223 ave discussed (cultural epidemiology and the psychology of individual differences); and (ii) argue th
224 n turn allows for more precise models of the psychology of intergroup conflict to be proposed and tes
225                               We suggest the psychology of kinship as a possible missing factor.
226  with empirical research on the motivational psychology of parental care.
227 rtant to carefully consider the threat-based psychology of prejudice(s) before implementing any strat
228  not consistent with the hypothesis that the psychology of punishment evolved to uphold group norms.
229 hould top the research agenda for the social psychology of race and race relations in the twenty-firs
230 mentary, we underscore the importance of the psychology of relative state, which is an index of relat
231  Our findings offer insights into the social psychology of science, and indicate a source of bias in
232                                          The psychology of suicide terrorism involves more than simpl
233 cide terrorism involves more than simply the psychology of suicide.
234  depart from self-theories that contrast the psychology of the group with the psychology of the indiv
235 ontrast the psychology of the group with the psychology of the individual by considering how differen
236 de Vliert's findings may be explained by the psychology of threat and bargaining.
237  finds support for four claims: (1) Academic psychology once had considerable political diversity, bu
238 in various disciplines, including economics, psychology, organizational behavior, politics, and biolo
239 he Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology Ototoxicity Scale (SIOP).
240 ecords from 3,801 cognitive neuroscience and psychology papers published recently.
241 model of self-control than classic cognitive psychology paradigms.
242 nd the boundaries of social and evolutionary psychology, paving the way for the emergence of macro-ne
243 l 19(th) century treatise, The Principles of Psychology, philosopher and psychologist William James d
244 l models and studies in cognitive and social psychology propound that visual recognition of facial ex
245 oad management; consolidation of psychiatry, psychology, psychiatric nursing, and social work service
246                               Existing moral psychology research commonly explains certain phenomena
247 We also explore future directions for health psychology research that includes "cold" aspects of cont
248 le summarizes three types of socioecological psychology research: (a) association studies that link a
249 vidence that these components of human group psychology rest on and are modulated by the hypothalamic
250 k theory of mind is not accurate, and social psychology's denial of stereotype accuracy led us toward
251                  Jussim's critique of social psychology's embrace of error and bias is needed and oft
252 ientific perspectives and limit evolutionary psychology's potential to serve as a unifying core theor
253 ical reflection that we review here and call Psychology's Renaissance.
254  Conclusions appearing throughout the social psychology scientific literature routinely overstated th
255 y that deficiencies in (components of) group psychology, seen in autistic spectrum disorder, schizoph
256 o choice theories in ecology, economics, and psychology, serving as an integrated decision variable b
257                    Recent findings in social psychology show how implicit affective responses can be
258 corporates this behavioral perspective, with psychology, sociology, and anthropology all likely to ma
259 ritical side of their review of evolutionary psychology studies.
260 vant phenomena described by neurobiology and psychology, such as local synchronization of synaptic in
261  the introduction of several new concepts in psychology, such as the uncertainty principle, incompati
262                           Early studies from psychology suggest that sleep facilitates memory retenti
263 evidence that in terms of their behavior and psychology, suicide terrorists are much like others who
264               Recent research in comparative psychology supports this association, in that entrainmen
265 e for evolutionary approaches to human moral psychology that existing proposals do not help to resolv
266                         The branch of social psychology that focuses on political issues has defined
267  interventions rooted in an understanding of psychology that have policy-relevant applications.
268 ental support for longstanding hypotheses in psychology, that genetic variation in social environment
269 cluding behavioral genetics and evolutionary psychology, the fundamental attribution error, and the r
270 d to explore connections between philosophy, psychology, the social sciences, the humanities, and stu
271 ioral development, quantitative genetics and psychology theories predict that genetic variation in so
272       This commentary draws on developmental psychology theory to expand the understanding of early m
273 cular scientists with colleagues in positive psychology to advance this new field.
274   Diverse fields, ranging from developmental psychology to computer science, utilize eye tracking to
275 onomics, psychiatry, and social and clinical psychology to develop a common language for studying rew
276                     We draw on research from psychology to discuss several characteristics that will
277        However, the application of cognitive psychology to explain experiences of aesthetic pleasure
278 oeconomics applies models from economics and psychology to inform neurobiological studies of choice.
279 d that uses methods normally associated with psychology to investigate questions normally associated
280 using computational models from mathematical psychology to relate these neural data to behavior.
281 earning in intuitive theories of physics and psychology to support and enrich the knowledge that is l
282                         The contributions of psychology to the scientific study of religion will incr
283 n interrupted task) in the applied cognitive psychology tradition.
284      Experts in the fields of psychiatry and psychology, transplantation, social work, ethics, and tr
285  We find that the hypotheses being tested in psychology typically have low prior probabilities of bei
286                                          The psychology underlying revenge in an intergroup context i
287 , the evidence shows that much of the social psychology underlying these phenomena (1) predates the a
288 , geography, history, political science, and psychology, we assemble and analyze the 60 most rigorous
289 s for the development of critical debates in psychology, we can detect at least three issues that war
290               Building on research in social psychology, we develop a mathematical model showing how
291           Using principles from evolutionary psychology, we propose a coherent theoretical framework
292 l and collective behaviors) and evolutionary psychology (which may thus study the length of tradition
293 st approach to human behavior - evolutionary psychology - which has produced scores of novel, specifi
294 logy, cognitive psychology, and evolutionary psychology, which are often isolated and even conceptual
295 is research on social influence processes in psychology, which explores how human social motives such
296  approaches should rely less on evolutionary psychology, which studies innate fixed capacities, and m
297 gue that, although reforming the taxonomy of psychology will lead to great insights in the cognitive
298                The assumption that combining psychology with history requires identifying actual inte
299 tury beginnings of industrial-organizational psychology with the diminishing numbers of job analysis
300 ogical balance, it is useful to place social psychology within a larger context of the prevailing ide

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