The psychology of poker involves bluffing and detecting the bluffs of others. |
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The field of psychology should be articulating a broad vision of human beings not a reductive fragmentary one. |
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All have had considerable experience designing and conducting laboratory experiments in social psychology. |
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Research in social psychology suggests many of us respond with aggression, but not all of us. |
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The obedience experiments had a profound impact within academic social psychology, altering the central message of the discipline itself. |
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Now sports science has lots of branches to it these days, from physiology to biomechanics, dietetics to psychology. |
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The next section of the book focuses on clinical applications of psychology in criminal matters. |
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Parker goes beyond the experiments to talk about the value of social psychology in general. |
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One goal is gaining federal support for psychology internship and postdoctoral training opportunities. |
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Eight Maryland seniors taught fellow students and teachers about psychology and adolescent health. |
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Sociolinguistics has close connections with the social sciences, in particular, sociology, anthropology, social psychology, and education. |
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The discourse analysis undertaken to answer these questions was informed by discursive social psychology. |
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He believed that the discoveries of sensationalist psychology had made it possible to articulate the fundamental principles of social science. |
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At Stanford, volunteering for psychology experiments, he discovered mescaline, LSD and hallucinations. |
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Their theory, known as the Terror Management Theory, or TMT, is a combination of social psychology and existentialism. |
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The literature in social psychology suggests that responses to racial discrimination will also be affected by situational factors. |
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What has edged into the mainstream of psychology is that which conforms to disciplinary orthodoxy. |
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Interestingly, the majority of journal investigations focused specifically on the subdisciplines of personality or social psychology. |
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Many experiments in fields like social psychology are laboratory experiments rather than field experiments. |
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His approach is a mix of animal behavioralism and human psychology with a little eastern philosophy and spirituality thrown in. |
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Like cognitive psychology, activity theory rejects behaviourism and attaches great significance to the cognitive regulation of behaviour. |
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Perhaps the shift from behaviorism to cognitive psychology has given educators a richer vocabulary to describe mental processes. |
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There is a subdiscipline of psychology devoted to the study of individual differences, too. |
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In seven schools, students were required to study only psychology and multiculturalism. |
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They include dog massage, canine anatomy, behavioural science and dog psychology. |
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Nevertheless, an understanding of psychological types opens the way to a better understanding of human psychology in general. |
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As undergraduate psychology majors universally learn, at its core, all psychology is social psychology. |
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As with her use of subtext, Griffith is quite modern in her use of setting to shed light on the psychology of her characters. |
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With a degree in psychology behind him, he now practises psychotherapy in Colorado with an inside track on dreams and nightmares. |
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Such behaviour is the besetting sin of psychology and renders science in the field concerned impossible. |
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Then in 1997, when she was midway through a psychology degree and seriously ill with gall stones, she was elected, and has not looked back. |
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Both of us are big sports fans and fascinated by the psychology of the people who rise to the top in sports management. |
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Cannington had stopped writing and was intrigued by the psychology and shift of temperament. |
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Parapsychology needs transpersonal psychology to keep it from foundering in technical sterility. |
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He studied Jungian and transpersonal psychology and took a special interest in allergic diseases. |
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I knew that I wanted a psychology minor but I was undecided between a chem or bio major. |
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Interdisciplinary sciences such as biochemistry and social psychology would also have to be included. |
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At present, there is a resurgence of biologism in both psychology and popular culture. |
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Sports Science will be active in all of the camps, assisting in areas such as nutrition, psychology, biomechanics and physiology. |
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That's the difference between having ideas about what people do and really knowing the psychology from the inside. |
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The hardest thing about playing Julie was dealing with the psychology of her fractured persona. |
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These connections were severed for a time when empirical psychology and speculative philosophy went their separate ways as academic disciplines. |
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Belarussian cinematography tends to focus on heroic and romantic genres, as well as the psychology of characters. |
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Thompson is a senior at Southeast High School, where he has developed an interest in social psychology, intelligence and positive psychology. |
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I think it is a neglected area, and I think that just follows the trend of psychology in general and a lot of areas. |
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Here's a sneaky, vital secret that turns conventional marketing psychology on its head. |
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Both emotionally stable and unstable students can benefit from a better understanding of psychology. |
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His first advice to teachers was to understand child psychology before handling naughty children. |
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The first is a scientific encyclopaedia covering logic, natural sciences, psychology, geometry, astronomy, arithmetic and music. |
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One is the rejection of foundationalism, which characterized modernism's theological reliance on science, psychology, and philosophy. |
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Then the shrink starts on about how at first they thought psychology was important but now things are changing. |
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Those raised in urban Western understanding of the psychology of the animal kingdom tend to view the fox as a cunning, sly, deceitful animal. |
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At this level of inquiry, psychology, neuroscience, and molecular biology closely interact. |
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Secondly, are the universals of human nature claimed by academic psychology more accurately seen as Western or Euroamerican patterns? |
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He studied psychology at the University of Leuven, before turning to theatre and film. |
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It reeks of the typical psychology and myopia of the supposed intellectually and militarily powerful. |
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He has interesting insights on the psychology of people drawn to this kind of procedure. |
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He has publish Ebooks and articles on psychology, singles, relationships and Popular Culture. |
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The Waterford-born woman studied psychology at University College Cork before going on to do an MSc by research at the University of Edinburgh. |
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Subfields of psychology can be arguably characterized as islands of unconnected knowledge. |
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I had stumbled upon the historical counterpart of my psychology of the unconscious. |
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Utterly uncontroversially, Laban also calls psychology The Bleeding Obvious and gets to quote Thomas Hardy. |
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No researcher in psychology should be unfamiliar with this article and its contents. |
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In contemporary psychology it is difficult if not impossible to be unexposed to his research and theories. |
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This derives from a malign mix of undigested social psychology and post-1960s social relativism. |
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Indian psychology doesn't require verification in the modern Western research methodology paradigms. |
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This is something I am going to address with reference to feminist psychology on power and body language. |
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Now I'm no psychiatrist but I do have a good understanding of psychology and body language. |
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It seems that our people's poet had an intimate knowledge and understanding of human psychology. |
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One of Alistair's main fascinations is human psychology and its role in sustaining an illusion. |
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Plato and the Stoics see Medea in terms of very different accounts of human psychology and the emotions. |
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There are long biographical interludes on the major figures, but no sustained attempt to convey the psychology of the individuals. |
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Few people understand the psychology of dealing with a highway traffic cop. |
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The fact that he is red-green color blind prompted an interest in optics and the psychology of vision. |
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It may help you to increase your sales by understanding the psychology of purchasing and your part in that process. |
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If we understand the psychology of job loss, we usually have an easier time adjusting to it and moving on with our lives. |
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But being the smart, sassy psychology student Ashton now is, he starts poking around, and soon people start dying. |
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This quote does not sound like psychology or sociology, but traditional political economy. |
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It is a model informed by developments in cognitive psychology and analytic philosophy. |
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In developmental psychology it's considered impolite even to mention it, let alone test it. |
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Now, from a developmental psychology point of view this is all very healthy and normal. |
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The programme seems to combine elements of pop psychology with an odd form of existentialism. |
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Promoting psychology in the community means psychologists must be involved members of the community, active and visible at the grass-roots level. |
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He holds degrees in criminal justice and psychology and I have already been picking his scholarly gray matter. |
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The pattern here is that businesses are falling for pop psychology fads that have no basis in the true science of psychology. |
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Red Dragon's goal of being a smart thriller is also tainted by the cheap and obvious pop psychology used to paint the characters. |
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Dropping those dualisms, he believes, will allow psychology to develop a more nuanced view of human behavior. |
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The missing knowledge, they believe, is in the locker room, the dugout, the team bus, the psychology of the players and the relations among them. |
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It doesn't take an exceptional amount of in-depth psychology to guess why I found a resonance in those four lines. |
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I think that as a field, psychology has erred in both ignoring food choice, and in studying food intake in nonoptimal ways. |
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Other techniques used in sports psychology to enhance performance include imagery, cognitive coping skills and relaxation exercises. |
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In a sense, ethology and Jungian psychology can be viewed as two sides of the same coin. |
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His psychology is surprisingly effective and though I am ready to drop I carry on trying my best, probably increasing my effort. |
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He studied physiological psychology in Germany and in 1869 received his MD from Harvard Medical School. |
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You don't need to know all of neuroscience, cognitive psychology and so on to know how your brain works. |
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Research in cognitive psychology has shown that we remember iconic images better than text. |
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His levitation tricks also depend on quite a bit of cognitive psychology to enhance their effect. |
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By the 1930s, it had become the dominant paradigm in American experimental psychology. |
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Oh, the novel has heaps of cod psychology thrown in so the hero is eternally conflicted. |
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The biographer delicately demonstrates the impact of this tumultuous childhood on the poet's work, without resorting to cod psychology. |
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In 1993, she co-chaired a conference with the professor on feminist issues in psychology. |
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The power of peer pressure is that it works on our psychology, not our intellect. |
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He is identifying questions he raised about the use of psychology in an article of his. |
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The Paedodontist treats children only, and is highly skilled in the practice of dentistry and the psychology of children. |
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Earl stayed through college, pedaling his bike several miles to and from K-State and earning a degree in sociology and psychology. |
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Freud learned from Charcot that, in order to understand hysteria, he had to look to psychology rather than to neurology. |
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He was so impressed that he went on to study psychology, neuro-linguistic programming and hypnotism. |
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Doctoral training programs that blend school, counseling and clinical psychology find their voice. |
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In August 2001, Casillas began her first year as a doctoral student in clinical psychology at USD after completing her master's degree. |
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A number of prominent psychologists have addressed the educational and practice trends in clinical psychology. |
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My experience has been in clinical psychology and my work has been with adults, children, and families. |
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Present the field of clinical psychology as one that emphasizes individual responsibility and freedom to choose. |
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As the director of Emory's clinical psychology program, Westen is both a clinician and an active researcher. |
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Health psychology and clinical psychology have also provided expertise on stress, health and mental health. |
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The work of CIA psychologists is grounded firmly in traditional clinical psychology and accepted professional practices. |
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Only about 40 percent of these coaches have training in clinical psychology, according to the International Coach Federation. |
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I earned my PhD in clinical psychology from Harvard in 1970 and came to the University of Maine, where I'm now professor of psychology. |
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My effort, in talking about the pathologies of public opinion, is to root the criticisms in well-established realities of public psychology. |
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Sailing is one of those sports which involves hydrodynamics, fluid dynamics, material science, human physiology, tactics, psychology. |
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I could not think of a more classic case where psychology was needed as a strategy to induce learning. |
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Combining astrology with psychology is one way we can help our clients and another way for us to better understand humanity. |
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She has made a cinematographically beautiful film empty of Nabokov's ecstatic genius, his prescient psychology, and her own original talent. |
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Human Personality can still speak to modern psychology and parapsychology in different ways. |
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Pertinent research findings in parapsychology and mainstream psychology will be summarized. |
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Dr. Smith is an authority on parapsychology, the psychology of superstition and paranormal belief, and the psychology of deception. |
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Unfortunately, this is the threshold used by most journals in medicine, psychology, and parapsychology. |
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A major focus of the book is on using theories from social psychology to explain gender differences. |
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To me, that means clinical psychology, not astrology, incantations, witchcraft, or palmistry. |
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Any approach to human psychology which recognizes that the brain is the product of natural selection lies within the pale. |
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He envisioned the nature of science and understood the roles of palaeontology, zoological geography, and animal psychology. |
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Born in Aberdeen in 1942, Sir Ian Wood graduated from Aberdeen University in 1964 with an honours degree in psychology. |
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She has an honours degree in psychology and has allegedly written two books. |
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Ogler wants to study psychology next year and said her best subjects, other than history, were home economics and biology. |
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Let us be bold in addressing the issues of psychology education and training, for the next generation is here. |
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Historians of psychology frequently grumble about the marginal status of historical scholarship within the discipline of psychology. |
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He'd learnt in psychology that parental behaviour had a strong impact on the subconscious. |
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My psychology theme is on the role of the subconscious in the development of psychosis. |
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She is chair and associate professor in the psychology department at Hampton University. |
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I would definitely recommend this book to students studying legal psychology as well as criminology. |
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English was the most popular subject, followed by general studies, maths, biology, history, and psychology. |
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The participants were 101 students from classes in general psychology at the George Washington University. |
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Over beer and spring rolls I find out that Julia is a first-year graduate student in clinical psychology. |
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Twenty-four male and 29 female first-year psychology students participated to earn credit for their course. |
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When it comes to understanding consumer debt, why do economists prefer pop psychology to statistics? |
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Their profession calls for a thorough knowledge about tourist sites, good command over the language and heavy dose of psychology. |
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In any case, I tend to avoid the pop psychology and head for the speculative fiction or fascinating non-fiction. |
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Pinsky cleverly weaves historical events and pop psychology trends into his analyses. |
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In a discussion of the psychology of the sexual act, Deutsch describes a woman who achieved full orgastic gratification. |
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And if psychology is taught in high school, it is offered typically as an elective course. |
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Grayson specializes in applying social, developmental, and organizational psychology to help camps better serve children and staff. |
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Part of pop psychology is that you should acknowledge your feelings, but there's no place for them in the workplace. |
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I know this is all just stream of consciousness, here, but I think the human psychology behind it is the same. |
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The disciplines of these students include psychology, computer science, English literature and optometry. |
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Last week's unprecedented events could have a far more profound effect on economic psychology than other catastrophes. |
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And his star quality is using that to his advantage to exersise his psychology against wallies like Hoddle. |
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Here's an interesting piece looking at the psychology of one of pop culture's greatest icons. |
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Exposing quackery in clinical psychology has in fact a much longer history than the article notes. |
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Strong defenses and a sense of denial are hallmarks of the substance abuser's psychology. |
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Under the headship of the neo-behaviorist Kenneth W. Spence, it led America in the production of psychology doctorates for many years. |
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The social psychology of technical innovation is as mysterious as that of any other form of creativity. |
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Thomas R. Verny, MD, is a gifted psychiatrist, academic, writer, communicator, and accoucheur to prenatal and perinatal psychology. |
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However, I will tell you that I have a four-year Bachelor's degree from an accredited university with a course concentration in psychology. |
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An abortive attempt at a psychology degree followed, then he jostled with the idea of becoming a drugs and drink counsellor. |
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He wittily captures the psychology of the situation without actually showing many of the faces. |
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Gabrieli is a psychology professor in the neurosciences program and in radiology at Stanford University. |
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This facet of human psychology has attracted the notice of numerous adaptationists. |
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We may have a political peace process, but on the ground there is still a war psychology. |
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He is an adherent of the somewhat controversial school of evolutionary psychology. |
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He is also an adjunct assistant professor of psychology at Case Western Reserve University and consults with summer camps and camp organizations. |
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He went on to establish the first administratively autonomous department of medical psychology in the United States. |
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At last I was a specialist in health psychology, but still a bit wet behind the ears professionally. |
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She makes a living applying animal psychology research to fields like cattle ranching. |
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The desirability of the effects and the legitimacy of the causes are questions left to esthetics, psychology, and moral philosophy. |
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It bore ethical and metaphysical implications that professional psychology could not rationally explain or justify. |
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In fact, he probably went into psychology in order to evade his own problems by concentrating on the mental afflictions of others. |
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The programme has taken some care to successfully combine cognitive-behavioural psychology with Maori kawa. |
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Two researchers specializing in the psychology of health say they've found a more productive way to wean sun worshipers from catching some rays. |
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Professional psychology has always emphasized the value of respecting privacy. |
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She does not try to airbrush his flaws nor does she indulge in pop psychology. |
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Where Bintley probes psychology lightly, McCabe seems to burrow, and winkle out hidden layers. |
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It should appeal to readers interested in social issues, psychology and the counterculture. |
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Many philosophers treat the beliefs and desires postulated by folk psychology as brain states with symbolic contents. |
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As much as I admire their enduring contributions to psychology and their intellects, I admire them even more for the quality of their characters. |
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My latest academic post here is another one of my attacks on the woolly thinking that is so characteristic of academic psychology. |
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In addition, psychology has the scientific knowledge base to help shape policies on children's mental health. |
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Regaining a foothold in international psychology was a hard-won achievement, to be sure. |
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She did not consider investigating abnormal psychology, where she would find many similar cases of Alice-in-Wonderland voyagers. |
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One school of ancient philosophers, the Stoics, developed a distinctive view of Medea as part of their ethics and psychology. |
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Why should psychology occupy a central position at all levels of education? |
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You might use reverse psychology and stress that a chaste distance from demon rum would be one of the advantages to seeing him fly off. |
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This was the use of psychology in economics that, when it was employed by Proudhon, called forth a rebuke from Marx! |
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It's the kind of thing you read in those psychology textbooks and it comes alive for you, doesn't it? |
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The production's preoccupation with the psychology of dreams foregrounds key notions of control. |
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Section 2 considers the role of forensic psychology in investigation and prosecution. |
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Participants enrolled in specific psychology courses received extra credit upon completion of the study. |
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She completed a BA in psychology at Concordia, but found herself drawn to broadcasting, beginning as a cub reporter on local radio. |
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Devised in Norway, this is an amalgam of traditional approaches and Western psychology, with no religious bias. |
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We'd talk about the nature of souls, notions of individuals and societies, and the function of psychology. |
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A great deal of modern social and clinical psychology took shape through the study of food habits. |
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When her father cabled her with a whole dollar to support this adventure, she returned to America to study psychology at Berkeley. |
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Today, such younger fields as cultural anthropology and psychology are thriving and are taught throughout the university system. |
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The few examinations of the use of nontraditional research methods in psychology converge on three points. |
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Processes of analogy have created coinages like petrodollar, psycho-warfare, microwave on such models as petrochemical, psychology, microscope. |
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Not only does one have to be concerned about individual analytic tools, but one also has to factor in the psychology of the individual analyst. |
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A total of 16 first-year psychology students participated for partial fulfillment of course requirements. |
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This was a woman-centred psychology, whose aim was to redress the theoretical and empirical inadequacies of an androcentric discipline. |
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Let's keep the psychology and rhetoric of argument in mind while we debate our differences. |
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It will baffle Anglophiles and provide psychology majors and cinema buffs much to talk about. |
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Our psychology must therefore take account not only of the conditions antecedent to mental states, but of their resultant consequences as well. |
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Vernacular psychology has it that emotions are irreducibly mysterious, too fuzzy and indistinct to analyse beyond a certain point. |
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An acute interest in psychology segued into medieval mysticism and from there he stumbled into Eastern philosophy and spiritualism. |
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Kant repeatedly emphasizes that the theory is not to be construed as empirical psychology. |
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She later earned a doctorate in psychology from Fordham University, and was the vicar for religious in the Trenton Diocese. |
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It was only after Gray reworked the book and retitled it that it became the bestselling pop psychology book of all time. |
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The only liberal arts that are growing are psychology and the biological sciences. |
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He said his daughter had a psychology degree and worked as a schoolteacher in a small Dagestani village. |
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In such a light, psychology would be the science of the double, of specters, and every photograph a double exposure. |
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Place this religious psychology alongside Buddhism, with its fleeing of the world. |
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He believes that some of the more dangerous ideas come from who we are, our genetics, psychology and our own free will. |
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Cycles of declinism tell us more about psychology than about underlying shifts in power resources. |
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Bookstores are bursting with self-help books, most of which are products or byproducts of the psychology industry. |
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In fact, after psychology, linguistics is probably the cognitive discipline par excellence. |
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His interests shifted when he met a professor who studied the interface between psychology and philosophy. |
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Third, the clinical psychology research literature has failed to incorporate cultural factors. |
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He has published many articles in the areas of archetypal and Jungian psychology, mythology and the arts. |
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Messer's artist portraits are animated by freewheeling brushwork, spurts of color and comic psychology. |
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As recently noted, the progressivist narrative of the history of psychology of women and feminism is problematic. |
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He is a recognized expert in linguistics and cognitive science, the study of the philosophy and psychology of the mind and intelligence. |
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The workshop will provide valuable tools to promote excellence in the teaching of psychology. |
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A new psychology initiative helps communities bridge racial and cultural differences. |
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Biological psychiatry and psychology need to rediscover the question of cure. |
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Even conventional psychology talks about the fact we have a conscious mind and a subconscious mind. |
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They entered psychology or psychiatry with an interest in understanding people's behaviour. |
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There are a plethora of textbooks on neuroanatomy, neuroscience, neurochemistry, physiological psychology, neurology, and psychopharmacology. |
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The academic curriculum in the late 1950s, featured large doses of both hard-nosed and soft-headed psychology. |
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This curriculum first introduces middle school aged children to the history, psychology and sociology of prejudice and discrimination. |
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The hot topics now involve the integration of economics with psychology and sociology. |
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They are required to have a college diploma at least, and their majors in universities must be related to law or psychology. |
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Born in Saskatchewan, Grant sowed the seeds for her specialty by majoring in psychology at the University of Saskatchewan. |
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A very popular analytical technique in psychology and sociology is factor analysis. |
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Now I guess in Jungian depth psychology and in psychoanalysis, the unconscious figures fairly dominantly. |
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He taught religion and depth psychology at universities and colleges and was a psychotherapist in private practice for over twenty years. |
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His research interests include developmental psycholinguistics, psychology of language, and developmental psychology. |
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I personally believe psychology, politics, sociology and economics make up what we know to be political science. |
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She is senior editor of health psychology for the journal Social Science and Medicine. |
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However, other controversies appear to reflect some of the deeper schisms within psychology itself. |
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In the mid-1980s one group began to organise itself around a version of sociobiology that they named evolutionary psychology. |
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Like sociobiology, evolutionary psychology has attracted more than its fair share of critics. |
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Unlike sociobiology and evolutionary psychology, these efforts do not ground their analyses in genes. |
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Perhaps the other area of psychological science most relevant to camps is behavioral psychology. |
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They will study modules such as chemical and physical forensic science, forensic psychology and criminal investigation procedures. |
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We must educate our fellow educators and fellow scientists about the science of psychology. |
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We promote the science of psychology, and we rely on the foundation it provides for the practice of psychology. |
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Likewise recessions or economic busts are set in motion if people suddenly change their psychology and stop spending. |
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However, evolutionary psychology differs from sociobiology in a number of fundamental ways. |
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Qualitative inquiry embeds psychology in rich contexts of history, society, and culture. |
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She gained her first degree in psychology and second in psychiatry and clinical social work. |
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I never did become a doctor, eventually studying physiology, psychology and philosophy at Oxford. |
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According to Fischoff, this approach draws from humanistic psychology, with its emphasis on self-actualization and personal growth. |
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Compared to the natural sciences and medicine, psychology is a relatively new field. |
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The first half of the book is an introduction to evolutionary psychology and to theories of deception and self-deception. |
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Weinstein is expected to enlist the usual battalions of experts on forensic science, jury selection and criminal psychology. |
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Readers seeking inspiration and encouragement can choose from a number of books dealing with popular psychology and self-improvement. |
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And the list does not stop with other branches of psychology or even other social sciences. |
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These researchers draw their inspiration from the discipline of psychology and study behaviour in a quite detailed way. |
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In her experiences in the psychology clinic, group therapy was a big help. |
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From a practitioner's viewpoint, an indigenized Indian psychology often means incorporating Indian techniques such as yoga and meditation into psychotherapy. |
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This conceptualization resonates with such postpositive movements in psychology as social constructionism, postmodern thought, and discursive psychology. |
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Even though there has been an increase in the black middle class, the psychology of the group is still liberal, still supportive of big, interventionist government. |
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I could certainly do without a lot of this pop psychology coverage. |
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It's as much an outburst of pop psychology as of religious atonement. |
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It wears thin after a while, but the pace is kept up by Vaguen's malaprops, slightly off analogies and clever reworking of typical pop psychology dogma. |
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And Mr. Kim's somber performance evokes the complicated psychology of a flounderer whose decisions are spontaneous, experimental leaps into the dark. |
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A sports science and psychology building would be built on the site of the existing swimming pool, health centre and squash courts, with a third building behind. |
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Chris Brand looks at the current fashion in psychology of saying that everything we do is the product of the situations in which we find ourselves. |
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In addition, psychology of women in general, and feminism in particular, continue to be explicitly and implicitly derogated and delegitimated within psychology. |
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Hedonic psychology is the study of pleasant and unpleasant experiences. |
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Puthenveed has analysed the psychology of most the biblical characters. |
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How do dreams appear to people who, lacking the explanatory and theoretical machinery of modern psychology and neuroscience, cannot psychologize them? |
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Cult leaders are usually psychopaths with a desire for power and often take ideas from politics, religion and psychology to fulfill their purpose, he said. |
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In the same grandiloquent tradition as Italian cinema, imagery is paramount in setting the mood and projecting the hidden psychology of the characters. |
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But if psychology is in fact beginning to shift in Europe, it could well make it easier for gun-shy governments to push through more meaningful reforms. |
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As a non-science, psychology is immune to disproof of its claims. |
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This conclusion together with the epigraph quoted at the beginning of this review establishes theoretical psychology as much more than a subdiscipline. |
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If one considers that psychology is the study of the minds of people, and if one agrees that people are emotional beings, then lalochezia can improve our understanding of psychology. |
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Evolutionary psychology has puzzled over the question of what is it about crying that would have been advantageous for survival. |
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He believes brain chemistry undermines his sense of free will and personhood and that psychology explains away love and altruism. |
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It combines pickup techniques supposedly inspired by evolutionary psychology with self-help pseudoscience. |
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Muslims made many discoveries in mathematics, chemistry, physics, medicine, astronomy and psychology. |
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This is my own pop psychology 101, but I will hazard a guess that belcher would have beaten her to death instead, or stabbed her. |
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Last seen in his previous series making a wally of himself while getting drunk in a motion-sensor suit, he presents this series where psychology meets biology. |
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She shares her own student quarrels with New Criticism, describes how she supplements her use of it with psychology and history, and laments its waning relevance. |
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When it comes to policy making, applications of social or cognitive psychology are now routinely labeled behavioral economics. |
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On Sept. 11, Beth Todd-Bazemore, PhD, a psychology professor at the University of South Dakota, was consulting at the Winnebago reservation in northeastern Nebraska. |
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A delicate mission, perhaps, to kindle friendship or extend love, but such is the structure of a psychology burdened by confrontation of animal hunger. |
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I was going to major in psychology and minor in women's studies. |
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He shares how psychology helped him become a world-renowned author. |
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This inaccessibility is fertile ground for the generation of psychomyths, as illustrated by the history of psychology as well as today's regnant cognitive psychology. |
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The discipline required for martial arts fed into the psychology of the character, who approaches everything mission by mission. |
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Johnson says she used her pain to dig deeper into her schoolwork and into her dual majors of chemistry and psychology. |
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