Great piece on growing climate hope and reducing climate anxiety while simultaneously acknowledging the crisis. Fear was needed a decade ago to kickstart action. Now that action has traction, kids especially need more of the good news
This is an amazing video produced for our kickoff ceremony of the Ann S. Bowers Women's Brain Health Initiative, led by @emilyjacobs.bsky.socialwww.youtube.com/watch?v=tX5u...
The Ann S. Bowers Women's Brain Health Initiative is driven by a radically simple idea: Progress in neuroscience will flourish when the health of men and wom...
Can cognitive #neurosciencewww.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...#reproducibility#measurability#refutability#generalizability#mobile#wearable.
Reproducibility, measurability, and refutability are the foundation of the scientific method applied to empirical work. In the study of animal and hum…
Interesting it’s only 9-12 year-olds. I would’ve assumed the developmental impacts show up earlier, say 3-6, during the initial stages of development and adjustment to screens.
lol my boss just called me into her office and told me I've been spending too much time on bluesky. Hold on she's saying something else now
Listicles Listicles Repetition Redundancy Imperseverance
Brilliant piece, Shayla, hope the dizziness remains at bay. If you’re interested, I am writing a piece about the mental gravity hypothesis I am proposing and my experience of depression (one paper published, more to follow). There is a lot of overlap and I thought it could suit psyche/aeon
Gravity and graviception are understudied across all mind and health sciences, I think. It’s so fundamental and affects so many higher-order functions, including selfhood. Even depression and anxiety are implicated. Dizziness is just the tip of the iceberg
The sensation we call dizziness is a sort of general alarm system for the body—but just as a fire alarm can’t tell you where a fire is burning (or whether someone walked through the emergency exit by mistake), it doesn’t necessarily tell you what’s wrong. www.newyorker.com/culture/anna...
Balance disorders like vertigo can be devastating for patients—but they’re often invisible to the doctors who treat them.
Thrilled to say that our new paper, ‘Insight in the conspiracist’s mind’, is finally out in Personality and Social Psychology Review. With stellar co-authors @joberv.bsky.social@stephengadsby.bsky.socialjournals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Hi #academicsky I feel cripplingly lonely doing my PhD with no peers at my age (22) and no peers outside of academia at the same stage of life as me. I feel disconnected and isolated socially, especially being queer and neurodivergent. I am reaching out to try to find others like me #PhDsky