- Online discussion groups aren't just for the devoted netizens: they're also a good proxy for the nation's emotions and positions on policy.
- When it comes to liars, it really does take one to know one.
- Want some good advice? Don't ask others - instead, ask yourself what others would advise.
- Asking someone to take an other's perspective usually increases tolerance of other groups - but not if that someone deeply identifies themselves with their own group. (See article listed at bottom.)
- Fundraisers, take note: people give more when they remember how good they felt after last time they gave.
- The Ultimatum Game is famous for showing that humans have an innate sense of fairness; but apparently we tolerate more unfairness when dealing with others from our own group.
- Evolutionary theorists speculate on how our sense of fairness piggy-backed on other human traits.
- Researchers gingerly suggest one cause of atheism: the ability to think analytically. But then, most of us are able to believe in the scientific and the supernatural at the same time.
- You think interest groups distort national politics? It could be worse at the state level.
- Government transparency and citizen participation usually go hand in hand, although one does not necessarily lead to the other.
- Fears from hunter gatherer times that still linger: we perceive our enemies to be physically closer than they are; and 100 is still the most dreadful number of deaths we can imagine.
- Southern men have been long known to react more strongly to affronts to their "honor." Unsurprisingly that 18th century mentality extends to their views on terrorists.
- Another study on the ingrained linkage between fear of disease and fear of foreigners - this time as evidenced by how we perceive foreign accents.
- Need a little more punch in your fear ad? Add a little humor. Or disgust.
- A psycho-social explanation for one of human's more distasteful behaviors: scapegoating.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
recent research
This week's picks from Kevin Lewis' blog:
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