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Psychology for You!

  • Magazine Issue
    04/2026

    Now is the time – A discussion on current sexual misconduct prevention and provider readiness

    • written by
    • Julia L. Lancaster
    Despite many efforts to prevent sexual misconduct, this unwanted behavior persists in private and public spaces. Given the prevalence of sexual misconduct and the likelihood that mental health care providers will be called upon during their careers to support survivors, how prepared are they?
    read more
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  • Magazine Issue
    04/2026

    Trapped by tranquility: Understanding dependence on benzodiazepines

    • written by
    • Joana Mihani
    Benzodiazepines offer relief from anxiety and insomnia , yet their calming effects can quietly lead to physical and psychological dependence . This piece explores how that reliance develops and why withdrawal requires support and patience. Recovery is possible when guidance, compassion, and gradual healing replace fear.
    read more
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  • Magazine Issue
    03/2026

    How do we interpret social situations marked by ambiguity?

    • written by
    • Lisa Vos,
    • Tom Smeets,
    • Jonas Everaert
    Imagine sending a message to a friend, and hours pass without a reply. Did you do something wrong? Are they upset? Or are they simply busy? Every day, we face moments like these: ambiguous social situations that leave us wondering what others think or feel. How we interpret these moments can shape our emotions, thoughts, social connections, and our own behavior, and can even impact our mental health. In this article, we review recent research from our team that sheds light on how people make sense of such ambiguous social cues, and why some of us tend to interpret them in ways that fuel depression and anxiety . By understanding these distorted interpretation patterns, we can better grasp how mental health disorders develop and persist.
    read more
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  • Magazine Issue
    03/2026

    Children in front of a screen: what is the impact of technology on their development?

    • written by
    • Marica Notte,
    • Daniela Renzi
    The use of technology, particularly digital devices, is having a negative impact on children’s psychological and physical development. This is largely due to two factors : today’s generations are growing up in an increasingly digital environment , and parents often allow extensive or unregulated use. In response, the international medical community has put forward recommendations aimed at regulating device use to minimize both short and long-term consequences.
    read more
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  • Magazine Issue 04/2026

    Now is the time – A discussion on current sexual misconduct prevention and provider readiness

    written by: Julia L. Lancaster
  • Magazine Issue 04/2026

    Trapped by tranquility: Understanding dependence on benzodiazepines

    written by: Joana Mihani
  • Magazine Issue 03/2026

    How do we interpret social situations marked by ambiguity?

    written by: Lisa Vos, Tom Smeets, Jonas Everaert
  • Magazine Issue 03/2026

    Children in front of a screen: what is the impact of technology on their development?

    written by: Marica Notte, Daniela Renzi
  • Magazine Issue 11/2024

    On the same wavelength—Do parents and children understand each other better if their brains are “in sync”?

    written by: Pascal Vrtička, Trinh Nguyen
    Humans are social beings by nature. We often (unconsciously) imitate each other’s behaviors—think of yawning or laughing. Recent research shows that this imitation extends even beyond actions; it happens in... more
  • Magazine Issue 10/2024

    Trauma(tic) media - What does it even look like? 

    written by: Kristen Leer
    Understanding how trauma appears in media and impacts vulnerable communities is important for researchers from various fields to investigate. However, to begin to understand this specific type of media, we... more
  • Magazine Issue 10/2024

    "We are on the same wavelength!" The creation of a shared reality and its relationship with uncertainty reduction and connection with others

    written by: Matteo Masi, Yael Bar-Shachar
    People seek connection by finding that they share the same understanding of things in the world. This creates a shared reality that builds connection and confidence, reinforcing shared reality itself... more
  • Magazine Issue 09/2024

    How body language helps us understand other people’s emotions

    written by: Britta Krüger, Julia Bachmann, Jörn Munzert
    Social interaction is a complex phenomenon. When we want to know what our fellow human beings are feeling , we have various sources of information at our disposal. One major... more
  • Magazine Issue 09/2024

    The psychology of digital disconnection: Why we want to use digital media less and if we should even try to

    written by: Julius Klingelhoefer, Alicia Gilbert
    Digital detox, digital minimalism, and smartphone free schools reveal a desire to reduce or change how we use technologies. However, disconnecting from digital communication like smartphones and social media is... more
  • Magazine Issue 08/2024

    Bug or feature? Boredom feels aversive, and this is why it matters

    written by: Wanja Wolff, Katja Rewitz, Dr. Maik Bieleke
    In class, during exercise, at work: boredom is an everyday experience that is generally regarded as an annoying and rather useless nuisance. In keeping with this attested uselessness, boredom had... more
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In-Mind Blog

  • 30.06.2018 | Big Questions in Society, Current Events, Violence & Aggression

    Doing ill for ‘the greater good’: Understanding what really went on in the Stanford Prison Experiment

    written by: Alex Haslam, Stephen Reicher, Jay Van Bavel
    Just about every highschool and college psychology textbook offers extensive coverage of Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE). The meaning of the SPE seemed obvious — that when given roles with power, people naturally become brutal tyrants. This message has had lasting influence, not only in psychology but in the world at large. However, after researchers have... more
  • 29.06.2018 | Current Events, Solid Science

    Wait, What?! The Stanford Prison Experiment was pre-tested?

    written by: Job van Wolferen
    With the recent news regarding the questionable nature of the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment, we thought it was purdent to republish one of our earlier blog articles drawing attention to the issue. The piece below appeared on our blog in 2012. A blogpost by the Neurocritic suggests that the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE) was based on a pre-test in which... more
  • 24.06.2018 | Big Questions in Society, Current Events

    The Violence We Have Committed

    written by: James Coan
    Circle of Willis is a podcast series from Associate Professor and Clinical Psychologist Dr. James Coan. The podcast features interviews with many of today's top social scientists, journalists, authors, and more. In a recent special episode of Circle of Willis, Dr. Coan speaks with five developmental scientists about what may be happening to the children who are currently... more
  • 20.05.2018 | Demystifying Mental Health

    Chemical or Financial Imbalances? Mental Health, Income Inequality & American Culture

    written by: Andrew Archer
    As societies become more unequal, the prevalence of all forms of mental illness increase—in part—due to the perception of extreme differences in status. The rise of mood disorders is caused by our social immersion in a digital culture—built and shaped via individualistic values—which is the financial machine for perpetuating income inequality. Psychiatry is reliant on a... more
  • 04.05.2018 | Demystifying Mental Health, Happiness & Well-being

    Demystifying Mental Health...On the Radio! An interview with podcast host Hillary McBride

    written by: Hillary McBride, Lucas Keefer, Mitch Brown
    “I like to tell people when I start working with them that I’m a therapist because therapy has changed my life. As a therapist, I know what it’s like to be on both sides of the couch." Normally, therapy sessions are totally confidential — but a new podcast from the CBC opens the doors. Hillary McBride and her clients want to help demystify mental health. No actors. No... more
  • 18.04.2018 | Popular Culture Series

    Does social media usage really make people miserable? Fact-checking claims about the psychology of Facebook

    written by: Dylan Selterman
    There’s been a lot of talk in the news recently about Facebook, and much of the discussion has centered on Facebook’s role in politics and journalism and user privacy. But there are other discussions about Facebook’s product itself, focusing on users’ well-being and psychological health. Specifically, some political commentators are making somewhat inaccurate and... more
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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 02/2025

    The price is right: how to get the best possible outcome in price negotiations

    written by: Marco Warsitzka, Michel Mann, Marco Schauer, Roman Trötschel
  • Magazine Issue 05/2012

    The victim wars: How competitive victimhood stymies reconciliation between conflicting groups

    written by: Luca Andrighetto
  • Magazine Issue 06/2024 - Special issue on sport psychology

    Unlocking the power of sports: the impact of Olympic values in prison rehabilitation

    written by: Omar Zanna, Cendrine Mercier, Jean-Philippe Melchior
  • Magazine Issue 08/2025

    How deliberate forgetting might lead to false memories

    written by: Yiwen Zhang, Nurul Arbiyah, Yikang Zhang, Henry Otgaar
  • Magazine Issue 10/2010

    Positive Psychology and the Importance of Close Relationships in TV Sitcoms: That 70s Show, Entourage, and How I Met Your Mother

    written by: Dylan Selterman

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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

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