Rich People Can't Recognize Your Emotions (It's Science, Apparently) - Culture - GOOD - 16 views
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people of upper-class status aren't very good at recognizing the emotions other people are feeling. The researchers speculate that this is because they can solve their problems, like the daycare example, without relying on others -- they aren't as dependent on the people around them. Maybe most fascinating is that "when people were made to feel that they were at a lower social class than they actually were, they got better at reading emotions," suggesting that even a temporary shift in context can account for behavioral changes.
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"people of upper-class status aren't very good at recognizing the emotions other people are feeling. The researchers speculate that this is because they can solve their problems, like the daycare example, without relying on others -- they aren't as dependent on the people around them. Maybe most fascinating is that "when people were made to feel that they were at a lower social class than they actually were, they got better at reading emotions," suggesting that even a temporary shift in context can account for behavioral changes."
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I am inclined to agree with you, it's a class thing rather than a money thing. we're subjected to a fair bit of it here in the UK, but are expected to 'play the game'
BPS Research Digest: Elizabeth Loftus: Prestige-enhancing memory distortions - 0 views
Conformity: Ten Timeless Influencers | PsyBlog - 10 views
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Wine and taste: Wine labels also affect our opinions of the food we eat : Cognitive Daily - 6 views
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In many cases, wine drinkers will actually rate the identical wine higher when it's presented in a fancier bottle. So if presentation matters, then perhaps the presentation of wine could actually affect the taste of the food it's served with. This is the premise of a study by Brian Wansink, Collin Payne, and Jill North.
Armed with information, people make poor choices, study finds - 12 views
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It's a cool study, but who wants to sit at a computer all day, getting paid to "take a test". "In a real-life scenario, a student who stayed home to study and then learned he had missed a fun party would be less likely to study next time in a similar situation -- even if that option provides more long-term benefits." This only proves that our current education system fails. Ask any student if they like school, they'll all say no. Hell, I'd rather be working then studying or doing homework, at least I get paid for it. Ask any post-grad and most will say they aren't working in the career they went to college for. So why should I study for a test to pass a course that means nothing to my future? Our current education system fails to do many things, it's a shame it's still broken.
*A Brain Scientist's Take on Writing*: What Mirror Images and Foreign Scripts Tell Us A... - 0 views
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For most adults in literate countries, reading is so well practiced that it’s reflexive. If the words are there, it's impossible not to read.
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If you raise a child on a desert island, he'll learn to eat, walk, and sleep, but odds are he won't spontaneously pick up a stick and start writing. For most of human history, written language didn't even exist. Reading as a cultural invention has only been around for a few thousand years, a snap of a finger in evolutionary terms.
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we’re very good at seeing, and the trick is just to retune that machinery to the demands of reading.
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What If Every Environmentalist is Actually Wrong? - 0 views
BPS Research Digest: Has the Internet become an external hard drive for the brain? - 0 views
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Have computers trained us to remember where something is, rather than what it is? http://ow.ly/5FaIl #psych
BPS Research Digest: Improving people's memory by punishing their correct answers - 0 views
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Pictures of dead cats can improve your memory [BPS Research Digest:] http://ow.ly/5KROh stronger connections via arousal #psych