Past studies have demonstrated that opinions based on hard facts and data can remain constant for many years, but new research published in the journal Psychological Science reveals that attitudes based on feelings and emotions can also stand the test of time. Charles Blue interviews Matthew Rocklage and Andrew Luttrell, authors of the Psychological Science article "Attitudes Based on Feelings: Fixed and Fleeting?" Read the full news release here.
Traffic Stops and Race: Police Conduct May Bend to Local Biases
2022 Spence Award Mini Episode: Jason Okonofua and the Power of Empathy
2022 Spence Award Mini Episode: Investigating Complex Brain Processes
2022 Spence Award Mini Episode: How People Manage Their Emotions
Mini Episode: How We Internalize Disorders
Constellations Across Cultures: How Our Visual Systems Pick Out Patterns in the Night Sky
Freedom vs Security: Can We Find the Right Balance?
Debunking Four Common Myths of Psychological Science
The Grieving Brain
The Top 10 of 2021: Psychological Science in the News
Better Behavior With Virtual Reality
Recipe for Success: Entrepreneurship and Psychological Science
Toys, Tots, and Gender
Ask the Witness Only Once
Science Rewind: Revisiting Three of Our Favorite Early Stories
The Ghastly Impact of Being Ghosted
Why Some People Won‘t Get Vaccinated
Psychological Interventions for the Treatment of Chronic Pain in Adults
Skeptical ‘Deep Dive‘ on the Myers-Briggs Test
Microaggressions: What We Know and Should Know
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Poetry of Science
Behavioral Grooves Podcast
Hidden Brain
Choiceology with Katy Milkman
The Science of Happiness