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  2. Plans and Diversions | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=2252
    2016)’, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 112 (2017), e5-e8.; doi: 10.1037/pspa0000079. ... proper psychology experiments (fascinating, mostly unsuccessful ones) involving literature …. … try something else NEW and rather BIGGER: I am
  3. Failing to Replicate the Public Good | What Literature Knows About…

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=1625
    An Attempt at Replication’, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 111 (2016), 46-64. ... piece listed above. It’s part of Psychology’s replication boom, which I have written about a bit here.
  4. Cambridge Authors » 26th June

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/cambridgeauthors/26th-june/
    26th June. In June 1923 he was thinking about relationships. In a letter to his friend Sebastian Sprott he doubted that psychology could give much insight into his unhappiness, even though ... your psychology is of course better than other people’s’
  5. Cognitively Responsible | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=653
    than practitioners within, say, experimental psychology can achieve, we can read carefully and as widely as is feasible (and we certainly do have a responsibility to do this, rather than getting ... Nevertheless, in psychology I think things move
  6. Judging Substance | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=149
    Nevertheless, in recent years, researchers in social psychology and related fields have been demonstrating the depth and ubiquity of these effects with such consistency and, sometimes, inherent drama that the whole ... A. Tesser and C. Leone,
  7. Suparna Roychoudhury, Phantasmatic Shakespeare: Imagination in the…

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/49.2.15/
    in Lisa Zunshine’s up-to-date and helpful collection, Introduction to Cognitive Cultural Studies.[5] New studies appear regularly referencing empirical cognitive research at the levels of neurology, psychology and ... The new scientists, after all,
  8. Naive Utility Calculus | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=1699
    Julian Jara-Ettinger, Hyowon Gweon, Laura E. Schulz, and Joshua B. Tenenbaum, ‘Computational Principles Underlying Commonsense Psychology’, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 20 (2016), 589-604. ... Overall they wonder how the simplifications that result
  9. Faculty of English

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/people/Sarah.Kennedy/
    Eliot's poetry and criticism through their affinities with discursive developments in 'new physics', optics, colour theory, cognitive psychology, and anthropology.
  10. Thinking with Space and Time (200th Post!) | What Literature Knows…

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=2470
    the Blind’, Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 147 (2018), 444–450. ... Mark Mills, Paul Boychuk, Alison L. Chasteen, and Jay Pratt, ‘Attention Goes Both Ways: Shifting Attention Influences Lexical Decisions’, Journal of Experimental
  11. Telling Stories About Animal Minds | What Literature Knows About Your …

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=2203
    Well, no, it’s Michael Tye’s book about animal psychology, with its cool title. ... In keeping with this, and as in, I think, a lot of crossover psychology books, Tye’s descriptions of experimental findings read like anecdotes, or stories really,

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