Neuroscience
Feast
Our round-up of the latest juicy tit-bits in the world of psychology:"All through the night I'll save you from the terror on the screenI'll make you seeThat this is thriller, thriller night" Michael Jackson.Why do we like scaring ourselves? The latest issue of
The Psychologist magazine is online and has a cover feature on the
lure of horror (free pdf), by Digest editor Christian Jarrett. Free digital preview of November issue. Full contents.
The Royal Society has made all journal articles in its archive over 70-years-old free-to-access.
Nobel laureate and psychologist Daniel Kahneman has a new book out "Thinking fast and slow" (excerpts). Review by Jonah Lehrer.
Video gives advice on getting published in academic journals.
Do you never forget a face? New mass-experiment at London's Science Museum on the notion of super-recognisers.
Teach yourself charisma - new post over at our off-spring title The BPS Occupational Digest.
Can I borrow Mo's keyboard? Guardian blogger and Digest contributor Mo Costandi with a lovely report on new research showing how golfers' performance improves when they think they're using an expert's equipment (their perception of the size of the hole is affected too!).
Book claims Sybil faked her multiple personalities.
Digest friend and contributor Vaughan Bell with a balanced and illuminating review of Steve Pinker's new book on the decline of violence.
There's still time to hear BBC Radio 4 get inside the mind of Steve Pinker on Life Scientific (on iPlayer). Pinker also says how he'd run the world in Prospect magazine. He was also on the Colbert Report (US viewers only).
The Sound of Fear, on BBC iPlayer, explores scary sounds.
Digest friend and contributor Wray Herbert with an intriguing report on new research showing that some decisions are made more effectively by older people relative to younger folk.
Test Your Brain - TV series - continues on National Geographic Channel UK. Check the website for clips.
Brace yourselves for a feast of Mind and Brain programming next month on BBC Radio Four.
Inaugural podcast from the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Nearly forgot to say: The Memory Network has launched. "The Memory Network brings together researchers, authors and artists, and organisations to provoke and fuel original ways of thinking about memory."
Do you ever miss your phone? Maybe you have Misophonia. Sorry, my mistake, it's a condition that has to do with being troubled by subtle sounds.
The latest episode of the ever-popular Psychfiles podcast.
Cartoon animation of fascinating lecture by psychiatrist Iain McGilchrist on our divided brain.
Last, but not least, there's hope for us all: Scott Barry Kaufman debunks overly simplistic media reports that greatness depends more on working memory skill than practice. In fact, as his analysis shows, high working memory isn't necessary for greatness. "So next time you see a study that says some ability is necessary for some form of greatness," Kaufman says, "remember that this isn’t necessarily the case. You can personally get there, regardless of the group trend. After all, working memory is common, but greatness is rare."
PS. Feast is the new name for our new regular round-up of psychology on the web (previously known as Morsels).--Post compiled by Christian Jarrett for the BPS Research Digest.
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Feast
Tuck into our latest round-up of the best psych and neuro links: The British Psychological Society has launched a new sports psychology portal "Going for Gold" with news and interactive features. On a similar theme - can you cope with pressure? BBC...
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Feast
Tuck into our latest round-up of the best psych and neuro links. New brains exhibition (free entry) at London's Wellcome Collection "Brains: The Mind as Matter" has now opened. Includes samples from Albert Einstein's brain. There's a new pictorial...
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Feast
Tuck into our round-up of the latest and best psych and neuro links: Does psychological and neuroscience knowledge change how we understand and think about ourselves? Charles Fernyhough explores this very issue in his second novel A Box of Birds. He provides...
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Feast
Our round-up of the latest juicy tit-bits from the world of psychology: The Greenfield saga continues. Recall that Baroness Susan Greenfield recently restated to New Scientist her fears that technology is harming children's brains, and that Professor...
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Feast
Introducing a new Digest feature: "Feast", our occasional round-up of links to recent psychology news, gossip, podcasts, blog-posts and radio/tv shows: BBC 2's Newsnight had a featurette on memory on Wednesday evening (from 30 minutes, 40 seconds...
Neuroscience