- Wage Increases Do Not Have A Persistent Effect On Job Satisfaction
- Specific Amino Acid In Diet May Influence the Spread Of A Deadly Type Of Breast Cancer
- Sick Bees Try To Look After Themselves By Eating Healthier Food
- Large-Group Living Boosts Magpie Intelligence
- Wood As Strong As Titanium Alloys But Lighter and Cheaper?
- '4-D Goggles' Allow Wearers To Be 'Touched' By Approaching Objects
- Hatchery-Raised Salmon Sort Themselves Into Surface- and Bottom-Oriented Groups
- How the Snake Slithers Across the Ground
- Do Starfish Have Eyes?
- High Levels Of Thirdhand Smoke Lingers In Casino Months After Smoking Ban
- New Form Of 3-D Vision Discovered In Praying Mantis
- Like Humans, Chimpanzee Self-Control Is Related To Intelligence
Dr. Patrick Seder is a post-doctoral researcher and instructor at the University of Virginia. His research focuses on well-being, positive emotions, culture, self-regulation, mindfulness...and the art of Andy Warhol.
Showing posts with label Fun findings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fun findings. Show all posts
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- Smoker + Drinker + Drinking Very Hot Tea = 5 X Risk of Esophageal Cancer
- Opioid Cessation May Be More Successful When Depression Is Treated
- Traffic Noise-Induced Harm To Cardiovascular System
- Researcher Finds Link Between 3-D Body Scans, Feelings Of Dejection
- Might Dim Light Make Us Dumber?
- Diabetes Doubles Chance Of Developing Cataract
- Nearly One In Three Pugs Has An Abnormal Gait
- An Elastic Skin-Like Liquid Bandage Wins FDA Approval
- Human Skin Flakes Lead To Bad Smell In Air-Conditioning Systems
- HPV May Lurk On The Surface Of Your Tonsils
- Sports Drinks Are Not Solutions For Illness-Related Dehydration
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Studies:
- Woodpecker Brains Contain Build-Ups Of Protein Associated With Brain Damage In Humans
- Cheetahs' Unique Inner Ear Is Vital To High-Speed Hunting
- Reciprocal Trading of Different Commodities in Norway Rats
- Belief In Conspiracy Theories Is Associated With Vaccine Skepticism
- Psychiatric Medications Are Not Overprescribed For Kids, Finds Study
- Sixty-Four Percent Of Women Suffer From Insomnia In Late Pregnancy
- Nutritionally-Speaking, Soy Milk Is the Best Plant-Based Milk
- Language Simplifies As Populations Grow
- Motivational Music Increases Risk-Taking But Does Not Improve Sports Performance
- Oklahoma's Earthquakes Strongly Linked To (Oil/Gas) Wastewater Injection Depth
- Better Support Needed For Thousands Of Informal Dementia Carers
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- Cheating Under Pressure: A Self-Protection Model Of Workplace Cheating Behavior
- The Dangers Of Unrealistic Optimism In Taking Advice From 'Expert' Advisors
- The Role Of A “Common Is Moral” Heuristic In the Stability and Change Of Moral Norms
- Other-Race Effect For Detecting Direct Gaze: Perceptual Expertise, Not Social Motivation?
- Caloric Primary Rewards Systematically Alter Time Perception
- Voice-Only Communication Enhances Empathic Accuracy
- Exposure To Intergroup Conflict Increases Meaning and Fuels Desire For Further Conflict
- How Witnessing Rudeness Influences Workers’ Subsequent Perceptions and Behaviors
- Affect From Mere Perception: Illusory Contour Perception Feels Good
- Seeing Red: Disgust Reactions To Gruesome Photos In Color (vs. B&W) Increase Convictions
- Maternal Anxiety Predicts Attentional Bias Towards Threat In Infancy
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- Quality Of Children's Sleep May Affect Eating Habits and Weight
- Substantial Increase in Eye Injuries via Laser Pointers In Children and Adolescents
- Microbes May Help Astronauts Transform Human Waste Into Food
- Have Archaeologists Discovered A 10,000 Year Old "Crayon"?
- Learning To Make Healthy Choices Can Counter the Effects Of Large Portions
- Study Could Explain Link Between High-Cholesterol Diet and Colon Cancer
- Discovery Offers New Genetic Pathway For Injured Nerve Regeneration
- Developing A Roadside Test For Marijuana Intoxication Isn't As Easy As It Sounds
- High Prevalence Of Vitamin D Deficiency Found In IBS Patients
- Air Pollution Linked To Irregular Menstrual Cycles In Teens
- Negative Emotional Content Disrupts the Coherence Of Episodic Memories
- Atheist Horns and Religious Halos: Mental Representations Of Atheists and Theists
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- Grass Pollen Allergy: First Vaccine Is Developed
- Flu May Be Spread Just By Breathing
- First Evidence of Sub-Saharan Africa Glassmaking
- Global Analysis Reveals How Sharks Travel the Oceans To Find Food
- First Global Atlas Of the Bacteria Living In Dirt
- Smokers Perceive Health Hazards of Smoking To Be Further In the Future vs. Non-Smokers
- Low Relationship Quality Is Linked To Higher BMI Among Women (But Not Men)
- How Treating Eczema Could Also Alleviate Asthma
- Breakthrough Study Shows How Plants Sense the World
- Radioactivity From Oil and Gas Wastewater Persists in Pennsylvania Stream Sediments
- People Who Sleep Less Than 8 Hours Are More Likely To Suffer From Depression, Anxiety
- When Is the Right Time To Start Infants On Solid Foods?
- Why Sitting In A Sauna May Be Good For Your Health
Labels:
Fun findings,
Nature,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- Home Alone: Why People Believe Others’ Social Lives Are Richer Than Their Own
- Bad Behavior Keeps You Up at Night: Counterproductive Work Behaviors and Insomnia
- Workers Interact More With Coworkers Who Have Similar Levels Of Well-being
- Uncertain Threat and Affective Bias: Individual Differences In Response To Ambiguity
- Social Anxiety Is Characterized By Biased Learning About Performance and the Self
- The Impact Of Walking Backward and Forward On Spatial and Temporal Concepts
- Nearly Imperceptible Fluctuations In Movement Correspond To Autism Diagnoses
- When Fellow Customers Behave Badly: Witness Reactions To Employee Mistreatment
- Jazz and Classical Pianists' Brains Work Differently--Even When Playing the Same Music
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- A Person's Face and Voice Both Contribute to First Impression Formation
- Mindfulness Increases Prosocial Responses Toward Ostracized Strangers
- Oxytocin Modulates Charismatic Influence in Groups
- How Babies' Brains Process Touch Builds Foundations For Learning
- Magical Thinking Decreases Across Adulthood
- Rates of Great Earthquakes Not Affected By Moon Phases Or Day of Year
- Bears -- Not Birds -- Are the Chief Seed Dispersers In Alaska
- 'Social Place Cells' in the Brain Respond To Others' Locations In the Spatial Environment
- 'Rainbow' Dinosaur Had Iridescent Feathers Like A Hummingbird
- Unattractive Locations Can Increase the Perceived Value of Neighboring Areas
- The Benefits of Writing A Very Specific To-Do List For 5 Min At Bedtime
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Fun (and Un-Fun) New Findings:
- Activity Monitors (Such As Fitbit) Are Only Effective When Users Set Goals
- Youth Using Alternative Tobacco Products Are More Likely To Smoke One Year Later
- Growing Opioid Epidemic Forcing More Children Into Foster Care
- Surfers Are Three Times More Likely To Have Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria In Guts
- Teens Who Were Severely Bullied As Children Are At Higher Risk of Mental Health Issues
- Key Stressors for GPs: Emotionally Demanding Workload and Confrontational Patients
- Babies Stir Up (and Inhale) Clouds of Bio-Gunk When They Crawl
- Exposure To Trees, the Sky, and Birdsong In Cities Is Beneficial For Mental Well-being
- US Childhood Mortality Rates Have Lagged Behind Other Wealthy Nations For Past 50 Years
- Severe Obesity Linked To Newly Identified Gene Mutations
- Monthly Brain Cycles Predict Seizures In Patients With Epilepsy
- African-American Adolescents May Express Depressive Symptoms Differently
- Weightlessness Increases Astronauts' Body Temperature
- Watching TV Shows Like CSI Will Not Make You Better At Concealing A Crime
Labels:
Fun findings,
RESEARCH
Intriguing Headline of the Week: "He Tried To Hold In a Sneeze and Ended Up In the Hospital On A Feeding Tube"
- Sneezing is an astoundingly powerful human action, blasting mucus and air from the nose and mouth at up to 100 miles per hour...That power exists whether a sneeze is held in or not.
- “Occasionally, people will cause some damage to their eardrums or their sinuses if they stifle a very violent sneeze,” Rachel Szekely, an immunologist at Cleveland Clinic, said in an article on the health provider’s website urging people to sneeze freely and not hold back.
- A healthy 34-year-old man living in the United Kingdom has learned that the hard way, according to a case study published Monday in the British Medical Journal. His attempt to stifle a sneeze backfired, and the force of that would-be sneeze tore through the soft tissue in his throat, rupturing part of it.
- One day he felt a sneeze forming and did what he often did: tried to stop it. He clamped one hand over his mouth while pinching his nose.
- While trying to hold back the sneeze, he felt a “popping sensation” in his neck, which began to swell. His voice also changed.
- Subsequent X-rays showed that the built-up pressure from the sneeze, which needed to escape his body somehow, tore through the throat’s soft tissue when its preferred exit — his nose and mouth — were blocked. It ruptured the pharynx, the membrane-filled cavity connecting the mouth and nose with the esophagus. It also caused air bubbles to form in his neck’s soft tissue, which caused the popping sensation.
- Fearing that a deep neck infection could form, doctors hospitalized the man, who was given a feeding tube and put on a regimen of antibiotics. He was released a week later, after the wounds in his neck healed.
- Sneezing is the body’s way of ridding itself of potentially harmful irritants in the nose, throat or lungs. Pressure builds up in the lungs and then forcefully explodes up the esophagus and out of the nose and mouth. But if those orifices are blocked, the pressure needs to escape somehow
- “I’ve seen patients with a ruptured eardrum or pulled back muscles, and you hear about cracked ribs,” [an otolaryngologist] told Time in 2015.
- “By stifling a sneeze, you could push infected mucus through the eustachian tube and back into the middle ear,” Szekely said in the Cleveland Clinic article. “You can get middle ear infections because of that.
Labels:
Fun findings,
WHO KNEW?
Fun New Findings:
- Better-Educated Parents Feed Children Fewer Fats and Less Sugar
- Changing Microbes in Guts of Mice Resulted in Rapid Weight Loss
- Pesticide Combination Affects Bees' Ability to Learn
- Genetics Might Determine Which Smokers Get Hooked
- Scientists Discover Driving Force Behind Prostate Cancer
- New Type of Solar Structure Cools Buildings in Full Sunlight
- How Microbes Survive at Bare Minimum: Archaea Eat Protein
- Just 'Weight' Until Menopause: How Estrogen Deficiency Affects Women's Fat Absorption
Labels:
Fun findings
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