In September 2020, APS published the first-ever gender parity review of psychological science: "The Future of Women in Psychological Science." The story behind this study, as told by some of the authors, is a compelling examination of personal experiences and observations. Through these discussions, a consensus emerges: Gender gaps for women in psychological science are closing, yet some remain, and more work is needed.
Participants include: Junie Burke, APS (interviewer); June Gruber, Univ. Colorado; Jane Mendle, Cornell Univ.; Kristen Lindquist, UNC, Chapel Hill; Toni Schmader, Univ. British Columbia; Adrienne R. Carter-Sowell, Texas A&M Univ., and Eliza Bliss-Moreau, Univ. California, Davis.
Microaggressions: What We Know and Should Know
Research Roundup: What‘s News in the APS Observer
Gender in a Nonbinary World
Can Coping With COVID Make Things Worse?
What Makes a Champion? Diversification Early in Life May Be the Key to Success
Parents Fine-Tune Their Speech to Children’s Vocabulary Knowledge
Gesturing Reduces Effect of a Classic Optical Illusion, Study Finds
Handwriting Beats Typing and Watching Videos for Learning to Read
Casual Sex, Self Esteem, and the Prejudices Women Face
Midnight Attack of the Earworms! How Stuck Songs Sap Sleep
Day 2 Preview of the 2021 APS Virtual Convention: The Excitement Continues
Day 1 Preview of APS 2021 Virtual Convention
From Activism to Radicalization: The Tipping Point of Unfairness
Out of the Box and Into the Lab, Mimes Help Us ‘See’ Objects That Don’t Exist
Special Episode: 6 Young Researchers Discuss the Forefront of Psychological Science
Emotion and Long-Lasting Attitudes and Opinions
Methodologies and the Evolution of Science: A chat with a science journalist
Horse Brain and the Human Brain
Training to Wisely Navigate Social Conflicts
How Depression and Stress Could Dampen Efficacy of COVID-19 Vaccines
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