Month: August 2021

Implicit bias reflects systemic racism

Implicit bias refers to automatically evoked mental associations about social groups. The idea has been influential across the social sciences as a way to explain persistent racial disparities amid changing self-report attitudes. Most research has treated implicit bias as an individual attitude. However, evidence suggests that it is neither a stable individual difference nor a […]

Published on August 21, 2021

The elusiveness of context effects in decision making

Contextual features influence human and non-human decision making, giving rise to preference reversals. Decades of research have documented the species and situations in which these effects are observed. More recently, however, researchers have focused on boundary conditions, that is, settings in which established effects disappear or reverse. This work is scattered across academic disciplines and […]

Published on August 21, 2021

A parent’s genes can influence a child’s educational success, inherited or not

A child’s educational success depends on the genes that they haven’t inherited from their parents, as well as the genes they have, according to a new study. Read Full Article (External Site) Dr. David LowemannDr. David Lowemann, M.Sc, Ph.D., is a co-founder of the Institute for the Future of Human Potential, where he leads the […]

Published on August 21, 2021