Psychologists
in sentence
183 examples of Psychologists in a sentence
There was a fascinating study prior to the 2008 election where social
psychologists
looked at the extent to which the candidates were associated with America, as in an unconscious association with the American flag.
In research done at Stanford,
psychologists
explored the case of people sentenced for the murder of a white person.
Psychologists
have explored this.
Psychologists
studied behavior objectively, neuroscientists studied the brain objectively, and nobody even mentioned consciousness.
GG: You know, I'm sure that's something for a team of
psychologists
to examine.
I'm talking about dentists and optometrists and psychologists, but maybe especially animal doctors.
So some
psychologists
said, when I tell them I run 140 humanitarian projects in the Himalayas that give me so much joy, they said, "Oh, I see, you work for the warm glow.
As most commonly defined by psychologists, PMS involves negative behavioral, cognitive and physical symptoms from the time of ovulation to menstruation.
What I'm saying is that getting some of these symptoms doesn't amount to a mental disorder, and when
psychologists
come up with a disorder that's so vaguely defined, the label eventually becomes meaningless.
For many years, because there was no standardization in the definition of PMS, when
psychologists
tried to report prevalence rates, their estimates ranged from five percent of women to 97 percent of women, so at the same time almost no one and almost everyone had PMS.
Feminist
psychologists
like Joan Chrisler have suggested that taking on the label of PMS allows women to express emotions that would otherwise be considered unladylike.
Psychologists
know that the moods of men and women are more similar than different.
Now, to understand laughter, you have to look at a part of the body that
psychologists
and neuroscientists don't normally spend much time looking at, which is the ribcage, and it doesn't seem terribly exciting, but actually you're all using your ribcage all the time.
So I hope there aren't too many
psychologists
in this audience.
The few
psychologists
and pediatricians who'd even heard of it figured they would get through their entire careers without seeing a single case.
Before "Rain Man" came out in 1988, only a tiny, ingrown circle of experts knew what autism looked like, but after Dustin Hoffman's unforgettable performance as Raymond Babbitt earned "Rain Man" four Academy Awards, pediatricians, psychologists, teachers and parents all over the world knew what autism looked like.
Data from
psychologists
and sociologists are quite persuasive here.
To psychologists, learning is a long-term change in behavior that's based on experience.
One part of the answer come from what
psychologists
call the mere-exposure effect.
To investigate,
psychologists
asked people to listen to musical compositions that avoided exact repetition.
Throughout the history of mankind, three little words have sent poets to the blank page, philosophers to the Agora, and seekers to the oracles: "Who am I?" From the ancient Greek aphorism inscribed on the Temple of Apollo, "Know thyself," to The Who's rock anthem, "Who Are You?" philosophers, psychologists, academics, scientists, artists, theologians and politicians have all tackled the subject of identity.
When
psychologists
Dunning and Kruger first described the effect in 1999, they argued that people lacking knowledge and skill in particular areas suffer a double curse.
That's what
psychologists
call the phenomenon of assuming that your ideology is based in love but your opponents' ideology is based in hate.
Three
psychologists
documented our inability to predict personal change in a 2013 paper called, “The End of History Illusion.”
Psychologists
have a great term for it: awfulizing.
I've done it with
psychologists.
Psychologists
tell us that the more we learn about what's broken in our world, the less likely we are to do anything.
So one of the most robust findings in the history of political psychology is this pattern identified by Jon Haidt and Jesse Graham, psychologists, that liberals and conservatives tend to endorse different values to different degrees.
As
psychologists
and parent trainers, we know that arming parents with skills in caring for their children can have a huge effect on their well-being, and we call this parent training.
Psychologists
talk about how gratitude is about taking a moment and holding on to it as long as possible.
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