Psychology and Neuroscience

  • shoes
    Doctoral candidate wins Visionary Grant to determine if timely monetary incentives encourage exercise as well as they foster better eating habits.
  • Mason
    Do you learn more if you study for hours without breaks or if you take short study breaks every so often? That question not only occurred to Robert Mason Eastwood but also formed the basis of his honors thesis.
  • SMART Student
    91´«Ã½ program helps underserved and underrepresented students in the STEM fields gain valuable research experience for graduate school.
  • wheelchair
    Many scholarships go to the most gifted students: the smartest, the most talented and, of course, the fastest and strongest. 91´«Ã½â€™s Robert Wyant Scholarship is granted to students who might be none of the above, but somehow achieve academic success while overcoming the challenges of disability.
  • Brain
    Achieving a healthy weight may be more about what’s going on between your ears than between your lips. That’s according to Eliza Kingsford (Psych’03) in her new book, Brain-Powered Weight Loss. It’s getting rave reviews.
  • DNA
    When Matthew Keller found he could not duplicate his own 2012 study that tied inbreeding to the chances of developing schizophrenia in a more-powerful secondary study, he wanted to make sure the scientific record was clear.
  • psychology
    Does psychological counseling need to be delivered by a psychologist to be effective? Not necessarily, according to a provocative new line of research involving 91´«Ã½ psychology professor Sona Dimidjian that suggests an army of trained “lay counselors†could someday provide a solution to the global mental health treatment gap.
  • genetics
    The combination of timeliness and depth of coverage make Behavior Genetics of Psychopathology a frontline resource for behavior geneticists, psychologists, psychiatrists, and neuroscientists, and is perfectly suited to graduate students looking to join these fields.
  • marijuana concentrate
    Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder’s Institute of Cognitive Science (ICS) have been awarded a $839,500 grant from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) to study the effects of using high-potency cannabis, informally known as “dabbing.â€
  • Zoe Donaldson
    The Science and Entertainment Exchange acts as a kind of matchmaking ‘hotline’ for filmmakers seeking expertise in a particular scientific discipline.
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