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2,213 results for the search term: social
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106
POPS
Why Intelligent People Tend To Be Unhappy
serene_ore
by serene_ore  3-11-2007    8
 No Remarks
99
POPS
6 Key Social Skills
firebird
by firebird  1-24-2007    5
 Obvious? Perhaps not - judging by how people often respond in social situations - where 'me' is the most important subject
71
POPS
Why We do Dumb or Irrational Things: 10 Brilliant Social Psychology Studies
Newfman
by Newfman  11-17-2007    3
 Descriptions of all 10 experiments at the site
45
POPS
Hormone spray could banish shyness
wildcat
by wildcat  7-18-2007    11
 No Remarks
44
POPS
Ten Minutes Of Talking Improves Memory And Test Performance
Mohir
by Mohir  11-1-2007    2
 good excuse to keep on talking :)
42
POPS
5000+ Resources to Do Just About Anything Online
chestnut501
by chestnut501  7-13-2009    7
 You Can Get the Complete List by Clicking on the Source at the Very Top of the Clip
36
POPS
Dogs (Not Chimps) Most Like Humans
dulios
by dulios  3-26-2009    8
 Researchers believe that 20,000 years of coexistence has led to similarities.
36
POPS
Believing You Can Get Smarter Makes You Smarter
wildcat
by wildcat  1-3-2008    8
 No Remarks
36
POPS
Lonely? Your immune system is in overdrive.
pokkets
by pokkets  9-13-2007    7
 No Remarks
35
POPS
It's Official: eBay buys Stumbleupon for $75 million
adamc
by adamc  5-31-2007    5
 First it was rumored at $40-45 million , then almost inked and now it's official. Will be fascinating to watch how they integrate it -- the Skype-Stumbleupon combo could be a compelling experience.
34
POPS
Those Who Read Fiction Better at Reading People
Deepti
by Deepti  12-20-2006    9
 No Remarks
32
POPS
Poverty Hurts
dmegivern
by dmegivern  6-27-2009    4
 Been waiting for science to confirm what I always knew & felt growing up in poverty. It's not just about the money, it's the pain that makes it traumatic. This article was life-validating.
32
POPS
Two clipworthy comments about the potential Clipmarks/Forbes deal
egoldstein
by egoldstein  8-8-2007    13
 These are two of the comments from Techcrunch's coverage. Two sentences here really jumped out at me. 1) it does something that neither digg nor delicious can do. 2) the community is much better than anywhere else. (my comment: damn right it is :) )
32
POPS
What Does It Mean to Be Human?
wildcat
by wildcat  6-4-2008    11
 and your answer?
31
POPS
Unchain your dogs
bignosemousie
by bignosemousie  8-21-2008    6
 Lots of information at the source. Photos that will break your heart. :( Unchain your dog, please.
30
POPS
Who's Minding the Mind?
Kore7
by Kore7  8-2-2007    8
  New studies have found that people tidy up more thoroughly when there’s a faint tang of cleaning liquid in the air; they become more competitive if there’s a briefcase in sight, or more cooperative if they glimpse words like “dependable” and “support” — all without being aware of the change, or what prompted it. In describing my own research or cognitive science in general to people, the most difficult obstacle I would eventually encounter was the stubborn human belief that there was a independent entity — a free will — in charge of everything important that goes on in their brain. While science has been steadily dismantling this understandable misconception for decades, recent studies on subconscious social priming like these would have helped me demonstrate my point. To be fair, it's more than a little disconcerting to realize what a messy mix of competing, semi-independent, multi-layered neural modules are responsible for producing our daily behavior.
28
POPS
Amanda Mooney as Clipmarks for Halloween
ericskiff
by ericskiff  10-31-2007    11
 Okay, how freaking awesome is this? Amanda dressed up as Clipmarks for halloween, complete with a paper full of "clipped" sections. Brilliant!
28
POPS
Human brain appears 'hard-wired' for hierarchy
wildcat
by wildcat  4-24-2008    5
 No Remarks
28
POPS
Hello? CIA? Are you watching Clipmarks?
BartendingBear
by BartendingBear  10-21-2009    9
 "Maybe. We are unable to comment on current operations."
28
POPS
Juliapatriciaroy gives ClipCast a glowing review
egoldstein
by egoldstein  12-13-2007    11
 Who can argue with Julia...she has to be right! :) Julia is definitely someone i have a great deal of respect for. In my mind, she's ahead of the curve when it comes to fully grasping the powerful social implications of the web. Having her think so highly of clipmarks really means a lot to us. Thanks Julia!
28
POPS
Love Deactivates Brain Areas For Fear, Planning, Critical Social Assessment
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  6-20-2008    4
 One does not need an MRI scan to figure most of the conclusions of this research. :-) Love is not so blind as it is blinding. Yet... who cares? :-)
27
POPS
Dogs have a sense of injustice
einbar
by einbar  12-9-2008    4
 "Perception of fairness may have played a role in the evolution of cooperation"
27
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Say hello to GGG!
wildcat
by wildcat  11-26-2007    4
 No Remarks
27
POPS
Anonymity online can turn nice people nasty
wiccantexan
by wiccantexan  9-26-2008    9
 No Remarks
27
POPS
Wondeful images - 2000 years of human culture
einbar
by einbar  12-15-2008    1
 Awards competition winner -Wellcome Images is one of the world's richest and most unique collections, with themes ranging from medical and social history to contemporary healthcare and biomedical science.
26
POPS
Why We Lie?
einbar
by einbar  1-9-2009    5
 Many animals engage in deception, or deliberately misleading another, but only humans are wired to deceive both themselves and others
26
POPS
Search YouTube, ClipMarks, Digg, Myspace in one place
Scattered_Fusion
by Scattered_Fusion  11-19-2006    6
 No Remarks
26
POPS
Women in Bihar break social taboo
Deepti
by Deepti  9-20-2007    8
 *applauds*
26
POPS
Emotional Cartography - Technologies of the Self
einbar
by einbar  6-7-2009    1
 No Remarks
26
POPS
Which Existed First: God or the Human Imagination?
wildcat
by wildcat  4-29-2008    22
 No Remarks
25
POPS
People Ditch Half Their Friends Every Seven Years
clip-on-tie
by clip-on-tie  6-2-2009    8
 No Remarks
25
POPS
A New State Of Mind
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  8-20-2008    1
 But that view of the neurotransmitter was vastly oversimplified. What wasn’t yet clear was that dopamine is also a profoundly important source of information. It doesn’t merely let us take pleasure in the world; it allows us to understand the world.
24
POPS
Breaking rules makes your brain light up.
pokkets
by pokkets  10-4-2007    6
 They write their findings could have implications for understanding the behaviour of psychopaths. They mention the activity regarding subjects that are presented with the possibility of punishment for their actions. Should guilt be another focus of this study? Guilt is related to both the action, and the fear of punishment. There is the idea that a psychopath has a conscience that is dysfunctional, but if this research leads to means if inducing subjects to condemn themselves, for failing to comply with arbitrary regulation, what can this research contribute to the development of crowd control, and social engineering aspirations? I know this seems alarmist, but they are trying to gather what they can from the location of a thought. When we have trouble explaining consciousness. While the conscious mind may be the tip of the ice berg, we have no idea how much ice there is.
24
POPS
The power structure of Bronze Age societies was based on social networks
wildcat
by wildcat  5-26-2009   
 I actually find this demonstration highly important and pertinent to our modern day situation on the web. It appears that evolution of civilization favors a society organized around the tribal concept (our modern day equivalent being the loosely knitted, groups or indeed tribes on the social networks). It seems that the future heralds a return to tribalism on a global scale via the web.
23
POPS
Why Groups and Prejudices Form So Easily: Social Identity Theory
einbar
by einbar  9-28-2009    4
 No Remarks
23
POPS
How Are Humans Unique?
einbar
by einbar  1-3-2009    3
 No Remarks
23
POPS
Why the Brain Follows the Rules
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  6-10-2008    5
  Not surprisingly, the threat of punishment made people act more fairly. In the “punishment threat condition” people split the money close to equally. However, when Person B had no recourse, the people given the money acted very differently and gave away, on average, less than 10 percent of the money. When the researchers looked at the brain activity of people playing this simple game, they found a consistent pattern. One region in the frontal lobes, the orbitofrontal cortex, seemed to be responsible for evaluating the potential for punishment. In other words, it figured out whether or not violating the social norm would get us in trouble. A second brain region, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, was responsible for inhibiting the natural tendency to keep most of the money (this would be the greedy thing to do) if this action might lead to future punishment. Interestingly, these brain areas only were activated when the threat of punishment came from a real person, and not a compute
23
POPS
Chain Reading: Social Network for Bookworms
invictus
by invictus  8-12-2006    2
 No Remarks
23
POPS
Sharism: A Mind Revolution
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  11-20-2008    3
 However, daily decisions for most adults are quite low in creative productivity, if only because they've switched off their sharing paths. People generally like to share what they create, but in a culture that tells them to be protective of their ideas, people start to believe in the danger of sharing. Then Sharism will be degraded in their mind and not encouraged in their society. But if we can encourage someone to share, her sharing paths will stay open. Sharism will be kept in her mind as a memory and an instinct. If in the future she faces a creative choice, her choice will be, "Share."
22
POPS
Stereotyping Yourself Contributes to Your Success (or Failure)
wildcat
by wildcat  4-9-2008    1
 As it turns out, research shows that such performance failures cannot always be attributed simply to inherent lack of ability or incompetence. Although some have jumped to the highly controversial conclusion that differences in attainment reflect natural differences between groups, the roots of many handicaps actually lie in the stereotypes, or preconceptions, that others hold about the groups to which we belong. For instance, a woman who knows that women as a group are believed to do worse than men in math will, indeed, tend to perform less well on math tests as a result.
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