Geographic Patterns of Mental Distress (04-15-09)
Moriarty and his fellow researchers have found geographic patterns of frequent mental distress across the United States.
Moriarty and his fellow researchers have found geographic patterns of frequent mental distress across the United States.
Cell phones are certainly distracting, but are particular ring tones less onerous than others?
Milliner reviews the negative response of many parishioners to the Modernist churches that house their congregations and attributes their unhappiness to the failure of these structures to meet worshipers’ psychological needs.
Seeing images of very cute animals (kittens and puppies, for example), makes human beings behave with more care.
Konkle and her colleagues have collected additional information about the interrelationship of sensory experiences.
Researchers have been investigating the influence of music on shoppers for years.
Even if our eyes are open, we may not see what we’re looking at.
Object variety influences apparent quantity and size.
In a ground-breaking study, Corney and his colleagues use information about the brain and the eye to explain the Helmholtz-Kohlrausch (HK) effect.
A study recently completed by Festini and his colleagues relates directly to nurses’ uniforms, but it is interesting to ponder what future related research might uncover about responses to environments.