Category: psychology

  • 100 More Things #151: DEVICES WITH ALERTS LOWER COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE

    100 More Things #151: DEVICES WITH ALERTS LOWER COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE

    There’s a lot of research about how talking or texting on a cell phone is distracting and leads to lower performance on cognitive (thinking) tasks, but research by Bill Thornton (2014) shows that people don’t even have to be using the cell phone for it to have an effect. Just having the cell phone nearby…

  • 100 More Things #150: WHEN PEOPLE FEEL CONNECTED, THEY WORK HARDER

    100 More Things #150: WHEN PEOPLE FEEL CONNECTED, THEY WORK HARDER

    Gregory Walton is a professor at Stanford who has studied the important effects of belonging on behavior. In one of his experiments, Walton (2012) found that when college students believed they shared a birthday with another student, they were more motivated to complete a task with that student and performed better on the task than…

  • 100 More Things #149: OXYTOCIN IS THE BONDING CHEMICAL

    100 More Things #149: OXYTOCIN IS THE BONDING CHEMICAL

    Singing and theater are favorite hobbies of mine. At various points in my life I have sung in a choir, played in concert bands, played in a marching band, played and sang in jazz ensembles, and acted and sang in musical theater productions. It’s great fun on many levels, but one of things that makes…

  • 100 More Things #148: SURPRISE, BUT NOT SHOCK, ENCOURAGES SHARING

    100 More Things #148: SURPRISE, BUT NOT SHOCK, ENCOURAGES SHARING

    In his book Contagious, Jonah Berger talks about New York Times online articles that get shared. Articles that had elicited strong emotion, whether positive or negative, were shared the most. Jennifer Aaker talks about emotion and passion as being components of what makes messages go viral in her book The Dragonfly Effect.In his research, Teixeira…

  • 100 More Things #147: JOY AND SURPRISE GRAB AND HOLD ATTENTION IN VIDEO ADS

    100 More Things #147: JOY AND SURPRISE GRAB AND HOLD ATTENTION IN VIDEO ADS

    Teixeira’s research shows that joy and surprise are the emotions that keep people watching a video ad. Because people don’t like ads and want to skip them, ads that stimulate both joy and surprise early on are the ones that grab and hold attention best. Teixeira used software that analyzes facial expressions to research the…

  • 100 More Things #146: PEOPLE DON’T LIKE VIDEO ADS

    100 More Things #146: PEOPLE DON’T LIKE VIDEO ADS

    Companies spend a lot of money on video marketing and video advertising, so it’s not surprising that there’s a significant body of research on these subjects. Thales Teixeira from Harvard Business School is one of the people conducting research on video ads.People are inundated with advertising: TV ads, billboards on the road, ads at the…

  • 100 More Things #145: EMOTIONS ARE CONTAGIOUS

    100 More Things #145: EMOTIONS ARE CONTAGIOUS

    I recently went to an improv theater performance. I’d had a busy week, and it was fairly late at night. I was tired and not that excited to be there. In fact, I’d been thinking of not going at all. As the room began to fill up before the performance started, I noticed that almost…

  • 100 More Things #144: CHANGE THE STORY AND YOU WILL CHANGE THE BEHAVIOR

    100 More Things #144: CHANGE THE STORY AND YOU WILL CHANGE THE BEHAVIOR

    In his book Redirect: The Surprising New Science of Psychological Change, Timothy Wilson describes a large body of impressive research on how stories can cause longterm behavior change. Wilson has people rewrite a self-story. He calls this technique “story-editing.” Story-editing has been used to help people with post-traumatic stress disorder and teens at risk. The…

  • 100 More Things #143: A PUBLIC COMMITMENT LEADS TO STRONGER SELF-STORIES

    100 More Things #143: A PUBLIC COMMITMENT LEADS TO STRONGER SELF-STORIES

    When people make a public commitment to a product, service, idea, or brand, their self-story about that product, service, idea, or brand becomes stronger. For example, let’s say that Maryanne creates custom bow ties for weddings and sells her bow ties on an arts marketplace online. She has a self-story that she is an arts…

  • Research on laughter

    Since laughter seems to be in the news (some politicians in the US are complaining that Kamala Harris, running for President, has a weird laugh and laughs too much) I thought I would re-visit the research on laughter that I posted several years ago in this blog: Research on Laughter — Considering how universal laughter is…