Archive for January 2025
Preserving the future through the past: Collective memory and immobility in adversity.
Why is the lack of support for women’s rights appealing? Considering the roles of dispositional system-justifying motives and ambivalent sexism.
The differential effects of reward prospect and reward reception: Dynamic performance adjustment versus stable performance.
Self-regulatory thought across time and domains.
Is task switching avoided to save effort or time? Shorter intertrial durations following task switches increase the willingness to switch tasks.
Pavlovian cues boost self-regulation: Predicting success with conditioned stimuli.
Balancing bytes and bonds: Case studies in systemic approaches to digital dynamics in diverse family systems
Kids count: children’s contributions in Latino mixed-status family labor dynamics
Adverse childhood experiences (ACE) and its association with mental health outcomes: Cross sectional study
Resisting the incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children: A scoping review to determine the cultural responsiveness of diversion programs
Prevalence and Characteristics of Children Entering Foster Care to Receive Behavioral Health or Disability Services
Critical Mixed Methods: The Imperative for Critical Inquiry and Reflexivity in Research
Mastering Discrete Skills Through Strategic Incremental Rehearsal
Loneliness Among Older Caregivers: An Analysis of the 2020 California Health Interview Survey
The Green New Deal from Below: How Ordinary People Are Building a Just and Climate-Safe Economy
‘He kept going until he couldn’t’: why do boomer men refuse to slow down?
This story is part of a much bigger demographic shift. After a century of rising life expectancy, people in the west are living 30 years longer than they did in 1900, on average, with 75% now reaching their 65th birthday and beyond. For those born in and around the baby boomer generation, this means entering the longest phase of elderhood in history, full of potential but also fraught with challenges.
Student pathways through postsecondary education, 2011 to 2022 [Canada]
Posttraumatic stress disorder in diverse populations: Testing for assessment bias in a nationally representative sample.
Visible wounds of invisible repression: A perspective on the importance of investigating the biological and psychological impact of political repression.
Cyber Aggression and Suicidal Ideation in Emerging Adults: Examining the Potential Roles of Depressive Symptoms and Nonsuicidal Self‐Injury
Global Mpox efforts should consider substance use disorders and need to end stigma for those with mental health conditions
Use of Medications With Somnolence Adverse Effects and Somnolence Symptoms Among Older Adults in the U.S.
Working from Home and Parental Childcare Division: Evidence from Two Years of the COVID-19 Pandemic
The role of objectification in young men’s perpetration of intimate partner violence
The best public health books of 2024
CfP: Fall Risk Assessment and Fall Prevention (Due by 31 Jan)
Special Emphasis Notice: AHRQ Announces Interest in Research to Improve Treatment and Management of Menopause symptoms
Significant funding for social care research
Psychedelic Regulation Beyond the Controlled Substances Act: A Three-Dimensional Framework for Characterizing Policy Options
Google Scholar is not broken (yet), but there are alternatives
An Introduction and Practical Guide to Community Engagement and Involvement in Global Health Research
Feeding People in a Crisis: The UK Food System and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Cost of Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
Perceived neighborhood disorder and achieving HIV viral suppression among adults living with HIV: A cross-sectional study
Brain structure differences are associated with early use of substances among adolescents
“This adds to some emerging evidence that an individual’s brain structure, alongside their unique genetics, environmental exposures, and interactions among these factors, may impact their level of risk and resilience for substance use and addiction,” said Nora Volkow M.D., director of NIDA.
England’s rundown hospitals are ‘outright dangerous’, say NHS chiefs
Hospital buildings in England are in such a dilapidated state they risk fires, floods and electrical faults, internal NHS trust documents reveal, with leaders saying conditions have become “outright dangerous”. Official papers from NHS trust board meetings show how staff and patients are being put at risk by an alarming array of hazards due to weaknesses in hospitals’ infrastructure.