People who are more prone to boredom and who are socially conservative are more likely to break public-health rules, according to new psychology research.
Researchers at West Virginia University determined willingness to try new things along with parental attachment could be indicators of self-control among first-year students.
Research forthcoming in the Journal of Applied Psychology looks at how experiencing rudeness amplifies anchoring bias including in doctors decision-making.
You may think a little white lie about a bad haircut is strictly for your friend s benefit, but your brain activity says otherwise. Distinct activity patterns in the prefrontal cortex reveal when a white lie has selfish motives, according to new research published in JNeurosci.