Jocelyn Solis-Moreira
Jocelyn Solis-Moreira
CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
0 reviews
PUBLIC
img-contested
N/A
0 reviews

RECENT ARTICLES

Sort by:
No Rating
What really happens during a near-death experience

What really happens during a near-death experience

Like science, tech, and DIY projects?Sign up to receive Popular Science's emails and get the highlights.LET'S GO

September 29, 2023
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
New study links the fear of missing out to Instagram addiction

New study links the fear of missing out to Instagram addiction

No Result View All Result No Result View All Result [] A new study in suggests that personality influences how people use social media. Their findings showed extraverted personalities along with people who have a fear of missing out (FOMO) on fun experiences exhibit more addictive behaviors on Instagram.“In our study, individuals with higher (vs. lower) FOMO reported a more favorable attitude towards Instagram, followed more Instagram accounts, and reported stronger social media addictive tendencies,” wrote study authors Kelly Moore and Georgiana Craciun.In this study, college students from...

July 22, 2020
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
Study finds upper-class people attribute achievements to hard work when faced with evidence of class privilege

Study finds upper-class people attribute achievements to hard work when faced with evidence of class privilege

No Result View All Result No Result View All Result [] A study published in the suggests that upper middle- to upper-class people tend to be unaware of their class privilege. When shown evidence of said privilege, they were more likely to provide merit-based excuses focused on personal struggle and hard work.“In short, social class provides privilege: those at the upper end of the income and education distributions garner unearned advantages, based on their class status alone,” explained L. Taylor Phillips, Assistant Professor at NYU and coauthor Brian S. Lowery.A series of experiments...

July 11, 2020
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
Study finds women are judged against more criteria than men are in job interviews

Study finds women are judged against more criteria than men are in job interviews

No Result View All Result No Result View All Result [] Research published found women were judged on multiple criteria for a job interview compared to men who were only evaluated on their skills. Women were judged on their competence, social behavior, and morality.“Overall, competence played a key role in evaluation and employment decisions. However, the findings revealed that women are evaluated against more criteria than men are and that women’s weaknesses along a single dimension are likely to affect employment decisions,” concluded the research team.The research was divided into 4...

August 20, 2020
Share
Save
Review
  • Total 4 items
  • 1
OUTLETS
psypost.org

psypost.org

CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
PUBLIC
img-trusted
91%
popsci.com

popsci.com

CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
PUBLIC
img-trusted
86%