#psy630
#psy630
VETO
SPSP is just around the corner and in our backyard of Chicago! @lydiaemery.bsky.social and I love the Chicago food scene, and we've put together a list of places we like. We hope this will help you enjoy and explore Chicago!! See y'all soon!!
docs.google.com/document/d/1...
Very proud to share this Annual Review synthesizing 75+ years of research across 150+ studies on how stress, starting as early as the prenatal period, shapes childrenβs health across systems. This is the first review to center interdisciplinary pediatric outcomes.
www.ucsf.edu/news/2026/01...
Boopy doopy doop boop Sex
Join our Replicability Project: Health Behavior!
We have 55 replication studies underway, our target is 65-70.
We are only recruiting for secondary data replications--i.e., using existing data to test the original question.
Here's a list of studies we think could be feasible.
If interested...
Just finished my last class of the semesterπReminded of how much I love teaching this academic writing class for grad students. We focus on improving our writing but also reducing anxiety and becoming a more consistent & productive writer
Some of the students favorite writing tips/learnings below:
Yes, it's one of the most common measures of relationship closeness! psycnet.apa.org/record/1993-...
Very cool to see this measure from relationship science move into poli sci!
A massive study on the effects of social class tested 35 hypotheses in 4 countries (N = 33,536)
Only 50% of findings replicated
Hypotheses based on differences between social class contexts in terms of constraints, uncertainty & status were supported:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Is social interaction a tradeoff of autonomy for belonging compared to being alone? New paper by phenom @elainehoan.bsky.social says yes if you're interacting with strangers, no if you're interacting with friends/family. With a romantic partner you gain in both. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
The comparison isn't 20 mins driving time versus 40 mins bus time; It's 20 mins primarily focused on driving versus 40 mins where you can do most work or personal enjoyment tasks that can be accomplished while sitting quietly in a chair
The GSS asked the same people about their childhood income rank three different times. 56% changed their answer, even though what was trying to be measured couldnβt change! We dig into this in a new article at @socialindicators.bsky.social. β¨β¨
doi.org/10.1007/s112...
π§΅π (1/5)
For my #psych profs, update to add to your availability heuristic slides
The Development and Validation of a Dimensional Childhood Adversity Measure journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
My first year, a senior person who was giving a guest lecture asked me βWho is looking out for awards for you?β That was a good impetus to reach out to my mentors and ask them to nominate me. I am trying to remember to be that person for others now
Technoference (how tech gets in the way of building/maintaining in-person social ties) was a major emphasis pre-COVID. Since then, more work has examined benefits to virtual interaction, esp. for people who would otherwise be isolated, & I'm starting to see work comparing the two contexts directly
Some researchers refer to this as "social snacking"-- It feels good in the moment, but does not imbue the full benefits or social "nutrition" that in-person social interactions do
Im begging the NYT to spend time talking to people who actually teach and work at universities. Especially ones that don't have billion dollar endowments.
My issues are AI use, crumbling infrastructure, vanishing staff, unfunded state mandates, a customer service model of education...
It's out!!πΆοΈπ₯
I once had a student explicitly argue that he was the customer to be catered to.
I explained that, if we *had* to use the customer framing, he wasn't the customer but the product. He was being given an education & then a degree that future employers would see value in.
My job? Quality control.
Disease prevalence in US states before & after vaccine introduction π§ͺ
From Edward Tufte & graphics.wsj.com/infectious-d...
I'm starting to look into how inflammation is being misused by MAHA types in a way that very much distracts from chronic illness-inflammation problems people actually have. If you're an academic, doctor, immunologist etc with thoughts on this, please be in touch at jmetraux@motherjones.com
It's less personal, but it does get them moving around, talking to one another, and learning each others' names!
In Stress & Coping, I give each student a slip of paper with a different definition of stress and a bingo boards to complete with classmates' names based on their stress definitions, with objective ("mentions biological response") and subjective ("you think is a bad definition") squares to fill
I have a friend who opens some of his courses with Aron's fast friends paradigm, so they at least get to know one person in the class! He says sometimes he sees them end up choosing to sit next to one another all semester because of itπ₯°
The First Lego League is a competition that schools from all over the place compete in. As part of the competition they need to consult with an expert. A lot of clubs use our program to make that connection.
This year's theme is archaeology. It's all-hands-on-deck for archaeologists.
In light of Vanity Fair's recent idiotic decision, WaPo's offering its veteran critic a buyout, the NYT's "reassigning" three arts writers critics, etc., a lot of us are talking about the public's (and thus publications') lack of interest in criticism. It's part of a larger pattern of a war...
If we don't laugh, we cry