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  • Educated bombers on the prowl

    All nine suspects in the July 26 serial bombings in Gujarat are well educated — at least two of them possessing degrees in Psychology and Commerce â...
    2008-08-21 02:19:58
  • Going to Space First Stop: Eight Months of Grueling Training in Russia's Star City

    <!--pageType= magazinewideslug= ff_starcitysection= techbizsubsection= peopleheadline= Going to Space First Stop: Eight Months of Grueling Training in Russia's ...
    2008-08-20 16:22:31
  • The Silver Blues

    Tom Gilovich, a psychology professor at Cornell University, explains why winning a bronze medal may score higher on the happiness scale than winning silver for an Olympic athlete....
    2008-08-20 14:04:37
  • When Adoptees Know Their Biological Mother

    More families are undergoing "open adoptions," meaning children remain in contact with their birth mothers after joining their new families. Findings published in the &ltem&gtJournal...
    2008-08-18 18:20:19
  • Science Weekly podcast: Music and the brain; plus evolutionary psychology

    Is music just "auditory cheesecake" or can it provide deep insights into the workings of the brain and the evolution of language. From the New Zealand haka to raves and dancing birds, James ...
    2008-08-18 17:35:23
  • ‘Kids fool grown-ups with ease’

    &ltp>&ltfont size="2">&ltstrong&gtWashington: A new study from the University of California, Davis, has found that adults are easily fooled when a child denies that an ...
    2008-08-18 15:55:48
  • Ramu to vent out

    &ltp>&ltfont size="2"&gtAfter experimenting with genres like terrorism, fear, psychosis and horror in his films, Ram Gopal Varma is now planning his next film on the media, in...
    2008-08-18 13:00:00
  • Cod psychology from coach Bowman spurs Phelps to Olympic splendour

    Michael Phelps knew how to react when the only swimming mentor he has ever known, Bob Bowman, uttered the poisonous words: 'It would be good for you if you lost today.'&ltimg width='1&...
    2008-08-18 07:16:34
  • Peter York On Ads

    Do you have a crucial reference group The idea is one of the loveliest little things social psychology has given us. It goes like this: you might be living in Pontefract but your mind could be elsewhe...
    2008-08-17 07:00:00
  • Study casts light on the psychology behind pupils who don't cheat

    Washington, August 17 ANI: Students who score high on measures of courage, empathy and honesty are less likely than others to have cheated in the past, and to intend to cheat in the future, according to a study at one Ohio university. Most of the students who reported less cheating during the study were also found to believe that their fellow pupils did not commit academic dishonesty regularly. Sara Staats, co-author of the research and professor of psychology at Ohio State University's Newark campus, said that students who did not cheat had a more positive view of others. "They don't see as much difference between themselves and others," Staats said.The researchers also revealed that pupils who scored lower on courage, empathy and honesty, and were more likely to report that they have cheated, saw other students as cheating much more often than they did, rationalizing their own behaviour.Staats said the continuing research project she has undertaken with Assistant Professor Julie Hupp and undergraduate Psychology student Heidi Wallace, both at Ohio State-Newark, aimed to find out more about the students who did not cheat-a group her team called "academic heroes". "Students who don't cheat seem to be in the minority, and have plenty of opportunities to see their peers cheat and receive the rewards with little risk of punishment. We see avoiding cheating as a form of everyday heroism in an academic setting," she said while presenting her findings in Boston at two poster sessions at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association.The research also suggested that the academic heroes would feel more guilt if they cheated compared to non-heroes."The heroes didn't rationalize cheating the way others did, they didn't come up with excuses and say it was OK because lots of other students were doing it," Staats said.The researchers say that one reason to study cheating at colleges and universities is to try to figure out ways to reduce academic dishonesty. They conceded that more work needs to be done to identify the best ways to prevent cheating, but insist that the present research, with its focus on positive psychology, suggests one avenue."We need to do more to recognize integrity among our students, and find ways to tap into the bravery, honest and empathy that was found in the academic heroes in our study," Staats said. ANI
    2008-08-17 04:00:33
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