Skip to main content
  • INT
  • DE
  • FR
  • IT
  • NL

User account menu

  • Log in
Home
  • The Magazine
    • All Issues
    • Glossary
    • For Authors
    • Magazine Staff
  • Blog
    • All Blog Posts
    • For Authors
  • Book Reviews
    • Book Reviews
  • The Foundation
    • What is In-Mind?
    • Credits
  • Donate

Psychology for You!

  • Magazine Issue
    02/2026

    A spoonful of misinformation helps the medicine go viral. How misinformation spreads and who bears the consequences.

    • written by
    • Lotte Slootmaekers,
    • Sanne Houben,
    • Irena Boskovic
    Back to January 2021: you are at home because of the COVID-19 pandemic and decide to scroll through social media for some much-needed distraction. Within seconds, you come across posts about microchips in vaccines, COVID spreading through 5G networks, and President Trump suggesting that injecting disinfectants could be a cure for COVID-19. Social media has become a hotbed of armchair experts, doom-mongers, and conspiracy theorists. You laugh off the misinformation easily, after all, nobody really believes this... Right?
    read more
    • Log in to post comments
  • Magazine Issue
    02/2026

    A step-by-step guide to writing science communication articles

    • written by
    • Maike Ramrath,
    • Stella Wernicke
    Effective science communication bridges the gap between science and society. This guide outlines practical strategies for turning psychological research into engaging, accessible articles, including topic selection, structuring the article, and responsible presentation of results.
    read more
    • Log in to post comments
  • Magazine Issue
    02/2026

    When loving hurts: The pervasiveness of stigma towards consensual non-monogamy

    • written by
    • Stefano Ciaffoni,
    • Yasin Koc,
    • Silvia Moscatelli
    Consensual non-monogamy is often seen as immoral, childish, or even harmful. This article reviews how stigma towards consensually non-monogamous relationships is widespread and socially shared, shaping judgments and discrimination against those who love outside monogamous norms.
    read more
    • Log in to post comments
  • Magazine Issue
    02/2026

    Scrolling through the past: How digital tools change the way we remember

    • written by
    • Kate Schramm,
    • Fabian Hutmacher
    We are constantly documenting our lives with digital technologies. But how do these tools, from smartphone camera rolls to wearables and social media platforms, change what and how we remember? In this article, we explore the interplay between memories stored in our minds and the available technological devices.
    read more
    • Log in to post comments
  • Magazine Issue 02/2026

    A spoonful of misinformation helps the medicine go viral. How misinformation spreads and who bears the consequences.

    written by: Lotte Slootmaekers, Sanne Houben, Irena Boskovic
  • Magazine Issue 02/2026

    A step-by-step guide to writing science communication articles

    written by: Maike Ramrath, Stella Wernicke
  • Magazine Issue 02/2026

    When loving hurts: The pervasiveness of stigma towards consensual non-monogamy

    written by: Stefano Ciaffoni, Yasin Koc, Silvia Moscatelli
  • Magazine Issue 02/2026

    Scrolling through the past: How digital tools change the way we remember

    written by: Kate Schramm, Fabian Hutmacher
  • Magazine Issue 07/2025

    Breathe through the stress: Simple breathing techniques for staying calm under pressure

    written by: Emmylou Sophie Schädler, Dr. Vera Zamoscik
    Breathing is more than an automatic process - it is a powerful tool for managing stress and improving focus. This article explores how intentional breathing techniques can help students stay... more
  • Magazine Issue 06/2025

    What is manifesting all about? The universe as a difficult conversational partner

    written by: Lisa Marie Warner, Nina Wieking
    It sounds too good to be true: "You can achieve any goal with simple affirmations". This is exactly how people on social media try to make their wishes come true... more
  • Magazine Issue 06/2025

    Why we’d buy a microwave from BODIKA_1996 but not from KODIBA_1996 – Articulation movements and their effects on judgments and decisions

    written by: Moritz Ingendahl
    People like inward-oriented articulation movements (e.g., in BODIKA – Lips → Tongue → Throat) more than outward-oriented articulation movements (e.g., in KODIBA – Throat → Tongue → Lips). This effect... more
  • Magazine Issue 03/2025

    Turning disagreements into opportunities: How couples can grow through constructive communication

    written by: Lukas Repnik, Barbara Hadolt
    What if every argument could bring new understanding and growth in your relationship? Explore how conflicts, when handled constructively, can strengthen your bond. Backed by research and filled with actionable... more
  • Magazine Issue 03/2025

    If you read this…

    written by: Mareike Ehlert, Elmar Souvignier
    … you can already do a lot! Reading is a bit like magic: You can easily read a word like “dozibrofu” out loud, even though you’ve probably never seen it... more
  • Magazine Issue 03/2025

    Small screens, big effects: How screen media shapes early childhood

    written by: Dr. Gizem Samdan
    How does early screen use shape child development? This article reveals how content type, family background, and parental media habits can either support or hinder a child’s cognitive, emotional, and... more
  • Load More Issues

In-Mind Blog

  • 16.11.2023 |

    The English version of In-Mind has relaunched

    written by: Sofia Calderon, Jana Dreston, Stella Wernicke, Maren Flottmann, Kaitlyn Werner, Malin Ekelund
    In Mind is a popular-science psychology journal that strives to make psychological knowledge accessible yet offer in-depth texts that relate results to different societal phenomena. The English version has been... more
  • 28.06.2023 |

    In-Mind International is relauching, and we are looking for people to join our team

    written by: Sofia Calderon
    In-Mind is an online magazine that publishes articles on psychological topics that are of interest to a general audience. I recently took over as editor-in-chief of the international (English) version... more
  • 09.03.2021 | Generalist Grab Bag

    Why a New Popular Press Psychology Book Refrains from Giving Advice

    written by: Patrick Forscher, Hans IJzerman
    During this pandemic winter, many of us will be away from the people we love most. The absence of the physical presence of loved ones deprives us of hugs, physical... more
  • 17.02.2021 | Generalist Grab Bag

    How to bring the gezelligheid this pandemic winter into your home

    written by: Hans IJzerman, Olivier Dujols
    One of the things we will miss possibly the most this pandemic winter in the Northern Hemisphere is gezelligheid [ɣəˈzɛləxɛit]. No real English equivalent of gezelligheid exists; the closest... more
  • 18.06.2020 | Race & Ethnicity

    Interview with Academics for Black Survival and Wellness

    written by: Regine Louis, Scott Stroud
    "Academics cannot stay silent about anti-Black racism, nor can they remain silent in the face of racial violence and injustice. We need to engage in the critical work to dismantle... more
  • 10.06.2020 | Big Questions in Society

    Hoarding in science, no thanks. Openness and transparency in crisis mode and beyond

    written by: Rima-Maria Rahal, Tobias Heycke
    During the current SARS-COV-2 pandemic, the scientific approach is thought to be unable to keep up with the rapid pace at which the crisis is spreading. After developing a research... more
  • Load more blog posts

Book Reviews

Buried Secrets: Rememberance of Things Past, a Review by Christopher Perez

reviewed by: Christopher Perez

The Coddling of the American Mind, reviewed by Dylan Selterman

reviewed by: Dylan Selterman

My Year of Rest and Relaxation, reviewed by Andrew Archer

reviewed by: Andrew Archer

The Hope Circuit, Reviewed by Joe Smith

reviewed by: Joe Smith

Social Psychology: Revisiting the Classics (2nd Edition)

reviewed by: Richard Skaff

Most Read

  • Magazine Issue 06/2024 - Special issue on sport psychology

    Virtual reality training in Olympic sports: Promises and pitfalls

    written by: Fabio Richlan, Jeremias Braid
  • Magazine Issue 12/2019

    To which gender’s disadvantage are school grades biased – girls or boys?

    written by: Carolin Schuster
  • Magazine Issue 07/2016

    Was that how it happened? Shaping our memory for personal experiences in conversation with others

    written by: Joanne Rechdan, Melanie Sauerland, Lorraine Hope, James Ost
  • Magazine Issue 04/2014

    Judging a book by its cover: Prior knowledge determines the effect of embodied cues.

    written by: Jesse Chandler
  • Magazine Issue 06/2008

    ‘The Vision Thing’

    written by: Alex Haslam, Steve Reicher, Michael Platow

The Inquisitive Mind Magazine is supported by:

  • DGPs
  • C-SEB

Menu

  • The Magazine
  • Blog
  • Book Reviews
  • The Foundation
  • Donate
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • print

About Us

In-Mind is a voluntary science communication project. We enable scientifically working psychologists to present their research topics in a scientifically sound, understandable and entertaining way for an interested audience: Psychology by scientists for everyone....more

Footer menu

  • Imprint
  • Data Protection
Clear keys input element