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1 gency is a central concept in philosophy and psychology.
2 vioral flexibility and are thus essential to psychology.
3 incorporate the great diversity within human psychology.
4 in ecology, economics, medicine, physics and psychology.
5 ling case that reasoning is central to moral psychology.
6 so as a part of a normally-functioning human psychology.
7 nes traditional economics with insights from psychology.
8 cted links with developmental and ecological psychology.
9  dramatically influencing our evolved mating psychology.
10 havior is explained in terms of evolutionary psychology.
11 hat sexual selection has shaped human mating psychology.
12  processes is fundamental for the science of psychology.
13 ems engineering (CSE), and applied cognitive psychology.
14              This is a problem for aesthetic psychology.
15 radiology mainly for psychiatry and clinical psychology.
16  was lower in cognitive neuroscience than in psychology.
17 dical Imaging, Neuroscience, Physiology, and Psychology.
18 esearch questions spanning multiple areas of psychology.
19  are currently being applied across areas of psychology.
20 ibutes to a robust and meaningful science of psychology.
21 c in educational, social, and organizational psychology.
22 diversity have received limited attention in psychology.
23 sophers, I accept the unsettling lesson from psychology.
24 ional, personality, interpersonal, and group psychology.
25 y be regulated by a common social-evaluative psychology.
26 is a promising and under-used methodology in psychology.
27 obstacles facing 'theories-of-everything' in psychology.
28 havioural ecology, behavioural economics and psychology.
29  epigenetics into developmental and clinical psychology.
30 findings from cognitive science and clinical psychology.
31  reflect the dominant traditions of American Psychology.
32 toms but also underlying pathophysiology and psychology.
33 phenomena actually share the same underlying psychology.
34 ridge spanning the gap between sociology and psychology.
35 f self-regulation both within and outside of psychology.
36 exts as they shift to a central topic within psychology.
37            Here we discuss how developmental psychology affords a unique and critical opportunity to
38         Maestripieri et al. pit evolutionary psychology against social psychological and economic per
39 tions in brain structure is an old dream for psychology and a crucial question for cognitive neurosci
40 hanisms might play a role in influencing the psychology and behavior of people from deprived backgrou
41 ng people contribute to differences in their psychology and behavior.
42 s, and is a key topic at the intersection of psychology and biology.
43 ding animal studies, as well as experimental psychology and clinical studies.
44 ain and advocates for a series of reforms in psychology and cognitive neuroscience.
45 fore, may have larger implications for human psychology and cultural belief.
46 and apply it to resolve two puzzles in human psychology and cultural history: (1) the rise of large-s
47          Throughout, important links between psychology and EBP are highlighted, along with the contr
48  by modelling the recursive feedback between psychology and environment.
49  found from research in other fields such as psychology and epidemiology.
50 ental principles of contemporary personality psychology and have been shown to hold across many cultu
51                    Contemporary inquiries in psychology and law increasingly cross disciplinary bound
52 suggest that it would be beneficial for both psychology and law journals to be more open to publishin
53  lies in connecting linguistics to cognitive psychology and mathematical theories of communication an
54 inical trial was conducted at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University in
55 ychiatric disorders has been a major goal of psychology and neuroscience for decades.
56                    A fundamental question in psychology and neuroscience is the extent to which cogni
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                              In experimental psychology and neuroscience, technological advances and
61 s been one of the most influential topics in psychology and neuroscience.
62 onal modeling of behavior has revolutionized psychology and neuroscience.
63  unconscious cognition remains a priority in psychology and neuroscience.
64 ose that they may have rich implications for psychology and neuroscience.
65 ge to many of the theoretical assumptions in psychology and neuroscience.
66  is currently a thriving area of research in psychology and neuroscience.
67                  Theoretical works in social psychology and neuroscientific evidence have proposed th
68 ientists that the lack of reproducibility in psychology and other fields stems from various methodolo
69 entral figures in classical phenomenological psychology and phenomenological psychiatry, and present
70 n intensely debated problem in neuroscience, psychology and philosophy: the degree to which the "phen
71 ently from the respective fields of positive psychology and preventive cardiology.
72 ul for answering some important questions in psychology and psychiatry research.
73 se of the idea of "reductionism" in clinical psychology and psychiatry.
74 lics enjoyed a short-lived relationship with psychology and psychiatry.
75 e profitably applied to other areas of music psychology and psychological science in general.
76 ocial Reality reviews the evidence in social psychology and related fields and reaches three (1) Alth
77 en the focus of a huge volume of research in psychology and related sciences for decades.
78 erlap between our evolved pathogen-avoidance psychology and responses to pandemics may help us realiz
79 tive status momentum-affects a focal actor's psychology and resulting performance.
80 p in providing metrics aimed at unifying the psychology and the neurophysiology of chronic pain appli
81 s about her characterisation of evolutionary psychology and the relationship between biology and cult
82         Based on evidence from developmental psychology, and behavioral and clinical neuroscience, we
83 ors that may inspire models in neuroscience, psychology, and behavioral economics.
84 n coming from social psychology, personality psychology, and cognitive neuroscience.
85 plore how theodiversity in turn shapes human psychology, and discuss three cultural dimensions of rel
86 mplementary methodologies from neuroscience, psychology, and economics.
87 eld has been largely subsumed by (cognitive) psychology, and educationally, it exhibits a striking la
88 er-choice, ownership intuitions, coalitional psychology, and more.
89 ber of different ways in both philosophy and psychology, and most controversy has centered on its sel
90 haeology, anthropology, biology, musicology, psychology, and neuroscience into a unified framework th
91 g the lack of replicability in neuroscience, psychology, and other related fields.
92 is extending to psychopathology and clinical psychology, and partly accounts for the problems of redu
93 evelop a new, action-oriented vocabulary for psychology, and recognize that higher-order cognitive pr
94 ow to found fields (social cognition, health psychology, and social neuroscience) and the challenges
95              We found that interdisciplinary psychology-and-law author teams (a) produce publications
96 oth directions and whether interdisciplinary psychology-and-law author teams produce more meaningful
97 ach exemplified by contemporary evolutionary psychology; and lay out some new and hopefully interesti
98 hose surrounding self-domestication and norm psychology; and we consider the role of religions and ma
99 volutionary game theory, human neuroscience, psychology, anthropology, and political science, that co
100                                Instead, this psychology appears intricately designed to capture socia
101 sed, the autonomy and irreducibility of folk psychology are assured.
102                     Research and theory from psychology are increasingly being utilized to understand
103              Most theories and hypotheses in psychology are verbal in nature, yet their evaluation ov
104  the well-documented differences in cultural psychologies around the globe.
105           This is the first Annual Review of Psychology article on the topic, and it offers a review
106            Study 1, a text analysis of 1,149 psychology articles published in 11 journals in 2015 and
107  of Vitality Exploring Dynamic Experience in Psychology, Arts, Psychotherapy, and Development (2010)]
108 ess a fundamental methodology of the goal of psychology as a hard science.
109 doing so, they risk positioning evolutionary psychology as an antagonistic subdisciplinary enterprise
110 linary programme integrating linguistics and psychology as part of the cognitive sciences of language
111 the majority of his career as a Professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania.
112  elicit more citations than only law or only psychology author teams.
113                             Thus, obligation psychology balances the downstream socially-mediated pay
114                          We tested whether a psychology-based personal initiative training approach,
115 anonical phenomena observed in the fields of psychology, behavioural ecology, and economics, and rece
116 masello strives to understand the underlying psychology behind the human sense of obligation, but he
117  only in social, clinical, and developmental psychology, but also in disciplines outside of psycholog
118 s of constructs in the field of experimental psychology, but has also been used as a true neuroimagin
119  optimism, that are a core focus of positive psychology, but have largely been neglected in preventiv
120  some high profile results---most notably in psychology, but in many other disciplines as well---cann
121 dgets theory proposes to reform evolutionary psychology by replacing the standard nativist and intern
122 s and analogies of critical aspects of human psychology can be found in diverse nonhuman taxa.
123                  Sociocultural developmental psychology can drive new directions in gadgetry science.
124 sequent and stable ape cultural evolutionary psychology ("CEP"; answer: unlikely); and (d) when CEP e
125 resources include classical phenomenological psychology, classical and contemporary phenomenological
126 put forward a challenge to the developmental psychology community to consider the development of comp
127 havioral economics has illustrated how human psychology complicates the process of moving from normat
128  psychological anthropology and evolutionary psychology contributes both methodological and empirical
129           Using the Reproducibility Project: Psychology data, both optimistic and pessimistic conclus
130          The success of a future sentimental psychology depends on whether "sentiment" can be delimit
131  diversity and interrogating the taxonomy of psychology; describe the ways in which neural reuse can
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 of complex structures discussed in cognitive psychology (e.g., episodes, scripts) and are the inputs
135  back to influential views in philosophy and psychology (e.g., William James), definitive experimenta
136 e study of risky monetary decision-making in psychology, economics, and neuroscience.
137     Emerging trends at the cross-sections of psychology, economics, and the neurosciences include an
138 cal interview (conducted by Annual Review of Psychology Editor and long-time collaborator Susan Fiske
139 ery and from other pertinent research areas (psychology, education, business) was reviewed looking fo
140 , medical and gynecologic oncology, clinical psychology, epidemiology, genomics, cost-effectiveness m
141 branches of science, including neuroscience, psychology, ethology, and medicine.
142 any applications of statistical inference in psychology fail to meet this basic condition.
143 culture itself evolves to produce indigenous psychologies fitted to particular environments.
144 opment of prosocial behaviour is shaped by a psychology for responding to normative information, whic
145                   At its origins, scientific psychology had a strong engagement with volition.
146                In recent years, the field of psychology has begun to conduct replication tests on a l
147                                    Cognitive psychology has demonstrated that many instances of false
148                 An influential literature in psychology has developed the theory that self-control re
149                                  Research in psychology has shown that even routinely experienced eve
150                                              Psychology has traditionally seen itself as the science
151                               However, moral psychology has yet to incorporate the study of social ne
152 s of movement, the foundational approach for psychology, has been complemented by ideas from control
153  cognitive empathy-borrowed from theoretical psychology-has been a major factor in nurses' negative a
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    Findings in behavioral science, including psychology, have influenced policies and reforms in many
157                                          Can psychology help?
158  has been widely applied in neuroscience and psychology; however, quantum reinforcement learning (QRL
159 tween parent and offspring are widespread in psychology; however, shared genetic variants often confo
160 al research in comparative and developmental psychology, I provide here a psychological foundation fo
161 atry clerkship (odds ratio=2.66), a major in psychology in college (odds ratio=2.58), and valuing wor
162 f the most controversial topics of cognitive psychology in recent years.
163 f recent work from a variety of subfields in psychology (including social, cognitive, developmental,
164 ychology, but also in disciplines outside of psychology, including business, law, criminal justice, m
165 cend traditional conceptual levels in social psychology, including experience and recognition of emot
166 reflected his efforts to understand medieval psychology, including the localisation of sensory and mo
167 nce Collaboration's Reproducibility Project: Psychology indicates high reproducibility, given the stu
168           However, research in developmental psychology indicates that the mechanisms underlying thes
169               We integrate tools from social psychology into autonomous-vehicle decision making to qu
170  and many substantive themes that cross from psychology into other disciplines.
171 esearch that may be classified as historical psychology, introduce sources of historical data and met
172 and how societal structures shape individual psychology is a foundational question of the social scie
173                                              Psychology is a potent tool for understanding the extern
174 te selection on warning signals, so predator psychology is crucial to understanding mimicry.
175              There is a broad agreement that psychology is facing a replication crisis.
176  Connecting labor economics and evolutionary psychology is laudable, but mating motives do not explai
177 recently reported low replication success in psychology is realistic, and worse performance may be ex
178     Our results illustrate how evolved human psychology is sensitive to the costs and benefits of bot
179 we suspect that its impact on physiology and psychology is so remote that its predictive power disint
180 most important recent developments in social psychology is the discovery of minor interventions that
181           If the orthodoxy is right, and the psychology is to be believed, people characteristically
182                    Whilst not eschewing folk psychology, it is useful to re-examine dictionary defini
183 tion attempt of 100 studies published in top psychology journals found that only 39% could be unambig
184 supported by extensive evidence in cognitive psychology, linguistics, and philosophy.
185 ign (RDD), first proposed in the educational psychology literature and popularized in econometrics in
186 ly identified in business and organizational psychology literature including self-justification, acco
187  The present review organizes the vocational psychology literature published between 2007 and 2014 in
188 ntage of medical students with undergraduate psychology majors and providing an exemplary psychiatry
189                                 In intuitive psychology, many inferences proceed without detailed cau
190 , chemistry, astronomy, geoscience, biology, psychology, materials science, engineering, finance and
191 sual search experiments used in the field of psychology may be applied to investigate the relationshi
192 probe task is a well-established paradigm in psychology, measuring emotional attention through reacti
193 ns their proposal has to offer developmental psychology more generally.
194 up contexts and appears to be yoked to group psychology more generally; we observed negativity bias f
195  space and time, and (2) although scientific psychology must be heavily revised, the autonomy and irr
196 ce of actual romantic partners, human mating psychology must possess a means to integrate information
197                                              Psychology needs to become a historical science if it wa
198 paradigms for assessing the self, drawn from psychology, neuroeconomics, embodied cognition, and soci
199                        Previous studies from psychology, neuroscience and geography showed that envir
200 ) is a framework of particular importance to psychology, neuroscience and machine learning.
201 e ways in which my proposals for integrating psychology, neuroscience, and evolutionary biology diffe
202                    Recent work in economics, psychology, neuroscience, and linguistics has begun to i
203 his article, I review literature from social psychology, neuroscience, management, and animal researc
204  interface of sensory science, food science, psychology, neuroscience, nutrition, and health sciences
205          It aims to provide a bridge between psychology/neuroscience research and economics research
206 elf-control, together with insights from the psychology of (perceived and actual) scarcity, might hel
207 ing synthesis of a growing literature on the psychology of attack and defense.
208                                          The psychology of cultural dynamics is the psychological inv
209 ience approach to prejudice investigates the psychology of intergroup bias by integrating models and
210                            An adequate moral psychology of obligation must bear in mind that although
211                            Tomasello's moral psychology of obligation would be developmentally deepen
212  with empirical research on the motivational psychology of parental care.
213 are reviewed that examine key aspects of the psychology of perceived unfairness.
214  and methods of neuroscience with the social psychology of prejudice, stereotyping, and discriminatio
215 hould top the research agenda for the social psychology of race and race relations in the twenty-firs
216 reasoning and set recent developments in the psychology of reasoning in the wider context of Bayesian
217 mentary, we underscore the importance of the psychology of relative state, which is an index of relat
218  Our findings offer insights into the social psychology of science, and indicate a source of bias in
219  knowledge linking chemistry of odorants and psychology of smells, our results provide a new computat
220 n men, which may be related to the cognitive psychology of the diagnostic process.
221  depart from self-theories that contrast the psychology of the group with the psychology of the indiv
222 ontrast the psychology of the group with the psychology of the individual by considering how differen
223                                          The psychology of the will to fight and die is illustrated i
224                                          The psychology of verbal reasoning initially compared perfor
225 al approaches found in evolutionary biology, psychology, or economics.
226 in various disciplines, including economics, psychology, organizational behavior, politics, and biolo
227 he Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology Ototoxicity Scale (SIOP).
228 ecords from 3,801 cognitive neuroscience and psychology papers published recently.
229 ional experts in transplantation, behavioral psychology, patient/parent advocacy, and technology.
230 models of self-regulation coming from social psychology, personality psychology, and cognitive neuros
231                        From the experimental psychology perspective, cognition is the set of processe
232                                      Faculty psychology played an important role in these discussions
233 l models and studies in cognitive and social psychology propound that visual recognition of facial ex
234 oad management; consolidation of psychiatry, psychology, psychiatric nursing, and social work service
235                          We reclassified the psychology-related phenotypes into 217 reclassified phen
236              Understanding our unique social psychology requires accounting not only for the breadth
237  use and implications of generic language in psychology research articles.
238 We also explore future directions for health psychology research that includes "cold" aspects of cont
239 he goal of this review is to enable clinical psychology researchers to more rigorously test competing
240 vidence that these components of human group psychology rest on and are modulated by the hypothalamic
241 different research fields such as behavioral psychology, reward neuroscience, and behavioral ecology.
242 k theory of mind is not accurate, and social psychology's denial of stereotype accuracy led us toward
243                  Jussim's critique of social psychology's embrace of error and bias is needed and oft
244 sions seriously lies at the heart of many of psychology's ongoing problems (e.g., the replication cri
245 ientific perspectives and limit evolutionary psychology's potential to serve as a unifying core theor
246 ical reflection that we review here and call Psychology's Renaissance.
247  Conclusions appearing throughout the social psychology scientific literature routinely overstated th
248 y that deficiencies in (components of) group psychology, seen in autistic spectrum disorder, schizoph
249 e for allergy services to work with hospital psychology services to develop, integrate and deliver ps
250 n the UK have funding for dedicated clinical psychology services.
251 o choice theories in ecology, economics, and psychology, serving as an integrated decision variable b
252 n studies across the fields of epidemiology, psychology, sociology, economics, and medicine to unders
253 sulting taxonomy shows that core values from psychology, statistics, and the philosophy of science em
254 owever, the resulting "cultural evolutionary psychology" still maintains some controversial aspects o
255           Participants were 956 introductory psychology students between the ages of 18 and 25 who co
256 ritical side of their review of evolutionary psychology studies.
257  relate to equally fundamental concepts from psychology, such as relatively stable personality traits
258 ing literature on cost-inclusive research in psychology suggests that delivery systems are one primar
259                                        Moral psychology suggests that judgments of robot responsibili
260                         Evidence from social psychology suggests that men compared to women more read
261               Recent research in comparative psychology supports this association, in that entrainmen
262 ack argue that comparative and developmental psychology teaches us that "neither animals nor infants
263 del of hormonal regulation of women's mating psychology that can better accommodate these new data.
264 e for evolutionary approaches to human moral psychology that existing proposals do not help to resolv
265 a large number of other replication tests in psychology that have been published in recent years, sug
266 ental support for longstanding hypotheses in psychology, that genetic variation in social environment
267 arily oriented within social and personality psychology, the interdisciplinary nature of NVC is evide
268 ng on the most widely used class of model in psychology-the linear mixed model-I explore the conseque
269 ioral development, quantitative genetics and psychology theories predict that genetic variation in so
270 stery of established findings in comparative psychology, there had better be some important payoff.
271 raws on long-standing influences in clinical psychology, there has been an explosion of research in r
272 roviding a window on quantitative historical psychology, this approach could inform policy and econom
273 cular scientists with colleagues in positive psychology to advance this new field.
274                                         From psychology to economics, there has been substantial inte
275        However, the application of cognitive psychology to explain experiences of aesthetic pleasure
276 ive and affective neuroscience, and clinical psychology to highlight four core dimensions of well-bei
277 dom effect" formalism is used pervasively in psychology to model inter-subject variability, few resea
278 as Borsboom et al. argue, makes reduction of psychology to neuroscience particularly implausible.
279 using computational models from mathematical psychology to relate these neural data to behavior.
280 earning in intuitive theories of physics and psychology to support and enrich the knowledge that is l
281                         The contributions of psychology to the scientific study of religion will incr
282 f cognitive neurophysiology and mathematical psychology to understand decision-making has been except
283 ons, and thoughts (person perception or folk psychology) to accurately predicting social phenomena mo
284 l evidence, including findings from positive psychology, to illustrate how a resilience-based framewo
285  screams could become an essential part of a psychology toolkit, particularly when investigating the
286 n interrupted task) in the applied cognitive psychology tradition.
287      Experts in the fields of psychiatry and psychology, transplantation, social work, ethics, and tr
288 , the evidence shows that much of the social psychology underlying these phenomena (1) predates the a
289 ore, to understand not only how but also why psychology varies, we need to grapple with cross-tempora
290 Hans Wallach and Wolfgang Kohler; his PhD in Psychology was from Harvard University.
291               Building on research in social psychology, we develop a mathematical model showing how
292  the methods and techniques of economics and psychology, we offer a cohesive framework for considerin
293 iness-in-averageness" effect found in social psychology, whereby otherwise attractive, intercategory
294 l and collective behaviors) and evolutionary psychology (which may thus study the length of tradition
295 st approach to human behavior - evolutionary psychology - which has produced scores of novel, specifi
296 e a novel approach - computational political psychology - which uses behavioral tasks in combination
297 erences and sex similarities in human sexual psychology, which vary according to short-term and long-
298 gue that, although reforming the taxonomy of psychology will lead to great insights in the cognitive
299 e Gadgets, Heyes seeks to unite evolutionary psychology with cultural evolutionary theory.
300 ed to revisit classic questions of cognitive psychology within a principled computational framework.

 
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