Psychology and Neuroscience

  • toad
    Disability Services is now taking 鈥渁 more holistic approach鈥 to help students with disabilities become more involved with campus and Boulder life. The shift has allowed students with disabilities to participate in activities previously outside the scope of Disability Services.
  • Alum wins presidential early career award
    Tina Goldstein, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh and a 麻豆免费版下载Boulder alumna, has won the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers. Goldstein is one of a select group of researchers chosen by President Barack Obama to receive this honor.
  • Building bridges between perilous homes and new horizons
    As part of her graduate studies, 麻豆免费版下载Boulder alumna Jamie Pledger performed psychological testing and provided counseling for international refugees. Her observations do not fit neatly into popular narratives about refugees from war-torn places like Iraq
  • Like-minded discourse breeds extremism
    鈥淭he results of two experiments demonstrate that people underestimate how much a brief group discussion polarizes their partisan attitudes,鈥 Keating said in her study summary. But perhaps worse, people appear to be unaware when this occurs.
  • Empathy for others鈥 pain rooted in cognition rather than sensation
    The ability to understand and empathize with others鈥 pain is grounded in cognitive neural processes rather than sensory ones, according to the results of a new study led by 麻豆免费版下载 researchers.
  • Pain
    Opioids like morphine have now been shown to paradoxically cause an increase in chronic pain in lab rats, findings that could have far-reaching implications for humans, says a new study led by the 麻豆免费版下载.
  • Caution: Caffeine
    Many have felt the jitters of too much caffeine, but new evidence suggests that such consumption puts adolescents at risk of suffering those symptoms on a daily basis, even after discontinuing use, according to a 麻豆免费版下载 study published in the February edition of the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology.
  • June Gruber
    At some point in your life you鈥檝e likely heard that 鈥渢oo much of a good thing鈥 can be bad for you. June Gruber has used science to prove this old adage true.
  • June Gruber, at left, is leading an interdisciplinary effort to improve human understanding of people鈥檚 emotions. Photo by Glenn Asakawa.
    Human emotions are universally experienced but not fully understood. A new initiative at the 麻豆免费版下载 aims to tap a wide range of expertise to shed light on 鈥渢he mysteries of human nature.鈥
  • Practicing yoga during pregnancy can help prevent postpartum depression. iStockphoto.
    Pregnant and postpartum women at risk of depression are less likely to suffer depression when they meditate or get in a yoga pose than when they are treated with psychotherapy or antidepressants, a study led by CU-Boulder researchers has found.
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