Conflicts driven by nationalism, ideologies, and cultures have become all too common. What can psychological science tell us about the causes and mental processes that push people from activism to radicalization? To shine some light on this topic, we hear from Kees van den Bos at the University of Utrecht, who is an expert on the study of radicalization. For more information, visit https://www.psychologicalscience.org/
Special Episode II: APS 2023 Spence Awardees on Sharing Minds, the Development of Learning, and Implicit Bias
Special Episode I: APS 2023 Spence Awardees on Fresh Starts, Time Perception, and the Well-being of Black Families
Is Cheating Just a Symptom (and Not the Cause) of Declining Relationships?
Stop Oversimplifying Mental Health Diagnoses
A Very Human Answer to One of AI’s Deepest Dilemmas
Top 10 Articles of 2022: Opinionated Fetuses! Cheating Spouses! And Much More
What You Know Changes What and How You See
Children, Creativity, and the Real Key to Intelligence
Failure and Flourishing
Why Is Everyone Else Having More Fun?
How Do We Know Ourselves?
What Music Does to Us
Exploration and Risk-Taking: Hallmarks of Adolescence That Increase Well-Being
Talking With Birds: The Fascinating World of Avian Intelligence
The September Collection: New Technology Can Be Scary, Why to Stop Worrying and Love the Eco-Apocalypse, and Much More
Attitudes Improve for Sex and Race. Disability and Age? Not So Much
Self-Injury: Can the Internet Play a Positive Role?
Love Lets Us Learn: Psychological Science Makes the Case for Policies That Help Children
Underweight and Overexposed: How Women’s Perceptions of Thinness Are Distorted
The August Collection: Attitude Changes, Cognition in Lemurs, and Much More
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