- The Globe and Mail
October 13, 2011
Viewing entries in
2011
- The Globe and Mail
October 13, 2011
- UTSC Commons
September 2011
- The Huffington Post
September 16, 2011
- Toronto Star
September 3, 2011
- National Affairs
July 12, 2011
- Psychology Today
July 10, 2011
- The Vancouver Sun
July 9, 2011
- The Ottawa Citizen
July 9, 2011
- The Montreal Gazette
July 9, 2011
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July 9, 2011
- Bloomberg Businessweek
February 24, 2011
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February 24, 2011
- Edmonton Sun
February 23, 2011
- National Post
February 23, 2011
- Toronto Sun
February 23, 2011
- Psychology Today
January 24, 2011
Researchers conducted experiments to investigate the psychological effects of flicking by and fast-forwarding through online videos during moments of downtime
Scrolling through videos on TikTok or YouTube to avert boredom may have a decidedly unintended consequence: It can make people feel more bored, according to the paradoxical findings of a recent study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. People seem increasingly intolerant of it, and Michael Inzlicht has a counterintuitive tip for avoiding boredom: Lean into it. Sit with the discomfort of boredom for a bit before flitting to something else. “If we’re so addicted to escaping boredom, so intolerant of boredom, it would be like a foraging animal going tree to tree, but never searching long enough to see if it bears fruit,” Inzlicht said. “Eventually, that animal will die.”
The struggle for self-control is real, and one many of us are familiar with - but is 'willpower' actually a myth? Psychology professor Michael Inzlicht has long been intrigued by how we curb our less desirable behaviours, and what it is that unites people with 'high self-control'. His research at the University of Toronto's Work and Play Lab also seeks to understand our complicated relationship with effort and empathy - and whether so-called 'empathetic AI' has a place in our future.
…This isn’t a relic of a bygone era. The idea that marijuana makes you lazy has been a recurring theme in anti-drug campaigns and remains a widely held belief. Many people still view cannabis users as unmotivated slackers, content to waste their days in a haze of smoke. But is this really true? According to recent research published in Social Psychological and Personality Science, it may be little more than a myth.
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