#1

At the end of the game when he asked the participants who started with more money why he won the game, they would chock it up to their excellent strategy and gamesmanship rather than the fact that they had started the game with way more resources. It says a lot about how we deal with being born into a privileged state.
#2

However, mice that had previously been on he left side and were now on the right (mice who had previously been “wetted”) opened the door considerably faster because they knew how unpleasant it was to be in the other scenario. Basically mice have empathy.
#3

I was placed in a room with 2 other people and we were instructed to drink vodka with cranberry juice over a period of time while we socialized. After we drank I was placed in a room where I had to read some flashing words on a computer. I felt pretty drunk at this point. When the researcher came back into the room he gave me my car keys and said I was never actually given alcohol. He briefly told me that because I was anticipating drinking for this experiment that my brain had tricked me into feeling the effects of being intoxicated. I immediately snapped out of it and was completely amazed at how I felt.
Many distinct areas of study have branched off psychology since it first emerged as a separate discipline in the late 19th century, Verywell Mind notes. These include abnormal, biological, clinical, cognitive, comparative, developmental, evolutionary, forensic, industrial-organizational, personality, and social psychology, among others.
But broadly speaking, psychology studies humans:
- Thought
- Behavior
- Development
- Pesonality
- Emotion
- Motivation and more
There are lots of ways that you can use the knowledge you garner from psychology experiments to improve people’s lives. For example, as you start to understand why people behave the way they do and what impacts their well-being, you can then create safer and more efficient workspaces, design better products, increase productivity, and generally motivate individuals to achieve their goals.
#4

The phenomenon has - among other factors - been linked to anti vaxxers, who over-estimate their expertise, not seeing what they don't know, with dire consequences.
#5

It basically says that negative things have a greater emotional and psychological toll on our health than positive/neutral things. So you got an A on a test, that's great. But you totally fail a test, and the world crumbles and it's a total disaster. A hundred things can go right and work perfectly throughout the day, but it goes totally undetected in our minds. Then someone cuts us off in traffic and we fume and rage. I learned about this theory almost three years ago and think about it all the time. Reminds me to appreciate and notice the many little things in my day that do go right.
#6

In the 1960s, Nobel award winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman gave a lecture to a team of Israeli Air Force flight instructors about the value of positive reinforcement. Having proposed the idea that positive reinforcement almost always produced better results, the instructors scoffed at the idea. Their experience was completely the opposite confirmed by years of experience.
The instructors had tried being positive and it didn't work. When they used positive reinforcement the results actually got worse. After bad performances, when they used threats and normal military reprimands, the instructors found the pilots almost always improved the next day. Thus Kahneman's suggestion was the opposite of everything these instructors had experienced.
**Illusions of Causality**
You may be asking, who could even argue with such seemingly conclusive results? Yet Kahneman could, because he was right.
He showed that the actions of the instructors were not the cause of the expected results, and in fact, these actions weren’t the cause of anything. What the instructors were reporting was merely a case of regression toward the mean.
The fighter pilots were the very top in their fields, extremely dedicated and motivated, yet they were human like any of us so they were prone to good and bad days. On average, they performed very well. When one would have a bad day that would be below his norm, mere probability suggests that his next day is likely to be better. Conversely, when one performed well above his norm, the regression worked in the opposite direction as the probability would show that he would be expected to perform worse the next day.
The fact that the instructors yelled in their faces or praised their efforts had little to do with their next performance. The pilots simply had good and bad days from time to time. But positive feedback created considerably less stress than negative feedback, which was a powerful asset in an already stressful environment.
The beliefs of the instructors were completely fueled by a false assumption about cause and effect. We all want to assume we know the meaning of things, especially when it seems obvious. Yet often in life there is more depth than we notice.
As famed English writer Aldous Huxley observed...
*"Man is so intelligent that he feels impelled to invent theories to account for what happens in the world. Unfortunately, he is not quite intelligent enough, in most cases, to find correct explanations."*
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SOURCE: Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (1973). On the Psychology of Prediction. Psychological Review, Vol. 80(No. 4). American Psychological Association, Inc.
One of the most fascinating subjects of psychology, at least for us, is willpower.
According to neuropsychologist Theo Tsaousides, PhD, willpower is directly linked to a person’s ability to self-regulate, which, in turn, is extremely important for goal achievement. To put it simply, willpower is your ability to prioritize goals.
While some researchers see willpower as a quantity, others perceive it as a skill. According to Tsaousides, the first perspective on willpower likens it to muscle strength. “The more you use, the less you have available until its levels are restored again.” In other words, willpower gets ‘used up’ with both time and effort.
#7

Red may be a signal of dominance as reddened skin is associated with higher testosterone (or possibly higher fertility in women). Wearing red may induce intrinsic psychological effects which increase dominance in addition to altering the perception of others. Researchers found that putting red leg bands on birds increased dominant behaviour, as they took the "lion's share" of the food.
For my psychology degree dissertation, I presented photos of men to be rated on a scale of Friendly (0) to Threatening (10). Men received a higher threat score if I photoshopped their t-shirt to be red.
#8

The point being that regardless what happens to you in life, good or bad, you will always adapt and spend most of your life feeling "neutral."
#9

I did a variation of it for a mate at uni and completely wimped out of it. After my face started not looking like my face anymore (I had a complete dissociation) I stopped looking and just waited out the time.
However, the second way of looking at willpower suggests that it is “in constant supply, independent of time and effort. Think of willpower as a skill. When you have mastered a skill, you can access and use it at any time, and you can improve it further over time.”
Whatever the reality might be, the fact of the matter is that you use willpower every single day to pursue your goals and make choices, both important and trivial ones. The more willpower you have available or you’ve developed, the more capable you are at making better choices, instead of doing what’s easiest and most comfortable.
#10

For a long time it was assumed that the eyes were somehow incapable of seeing following the trauma and that was why people were blind, however it’s been shown that it is just the processing of the images that is damaged-in other words your eyes are still working away, viewing images but your brain is unable to process the images so you can’t “see” them.
Some experiments looking into this have found that people with damage to this area can still navigate around things in front of them, without realising they are doing it. So if you told someone with this damage to walk down a corridor, and you placed obstacles in their way, they wouldn’t be able to see the obstacles but they could avoid bumping into them because their eyes are still able to view them and send signals to other areas of the brain to avoid knocking things. This is known as blind-sightedness.
#11

#12

What are your thoughts, dear Pandas? Are you big fans of psychology? What are the weirdest experiments that you’ve ever heard of? What unusual psychological phenomena have caught your attention the most?
Have you ever studied psychology or plan to do so in the future? Let us know in the comments below!
#13

On this experiment, they took groups of orphaned children and separated them into 3 groups. One was the control, the second were told they has a lips and were doing bad, and the third was told that their speech was perfect.
As the experiment went on, group 2 began developing lisps after being berated constantly. They became shy and reserved. They were scared to speak because they didn't want to get in trouble because of their poor speaking skills. Group 3, however, had the opposite happen. They talked better, they were more willing to improve. They were encouraged to keep speaking and told that their speech was amazing and perfect.
By the end of the experiment, they had one group with no change, one group with now mentally ill children with a speech impediment, and one group with great speaking skills.
It truly shows that encouraging children is the way to go and that verbal abuse can be just as, if not more, harmful as physical abuse.
#14

#15

#16

The kids were each told they were going to be the first to receive a new experimental treatment for their condition, which consisted of putting them into a fake, non-functional MRI machine. Before doing so, they told them that the machine had the power to help them heal their brain. Michael even got a bunch of famous Youtubers to make fake videos discussing the new technology to make the kids believe it. While they were in the machine, the researchers (dressed as doctors) asked the kids if they were feeling the effects of the machine, and that they believed it was working. They never lied to the kids, they just told them it would give them the power to heal themselves.
All three of the kids had markedly improved symptoms several weeks later. The girl with eczema pretty much entirely stopped picking her skin to the point that she felt comfortable wearing short sleeve shirts for the first time. The mother of the kid with ADHD reported that he was much more calm and not as hyperactive. The kid with chronic migraines went from having something like 5-10 debilitating migraines per day to absolute zero, as shown by the chart his mom kept to track them.
#17

#18

Basically they brought together a group of kids and formed a class with a real teacher. They gave the kids a test for overall academic skill at the start of the course, but didn't really use the scores. Instead they told the teachers that a few students, picked at random, were very brilliant and scores very highly. They then observed the class for a long period of time and noticed that the teachers gave the kids they thought were brilliant much more attention. At the end of the study the kids took the test again, and they found that the kids who were randomly named brilliant at the start actually scores higher than the rest of the class. The kids, again, at the start didn't score any different from the rest of the class, but through the self fulfilling prophecy they became the best in their class.
This obviously has tons of application in the world and especially education.
#19

This research has been used to explain certain aspects of human behavior, especially related to repeated experiences of ab**e and poverty. It takes a long time to get somebody out of this mindset, and is possibly one of the reasons why people get "stuck" in terrible situations.
#20

What the finding showed was that it's introverts who are the sensation seekers, needing stimulation from the outside world. Extroverts create their own internal sensation and project that out to the world.


