Psychological Science
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Heatstroke, sports washing and VAR psychology: the science of the World Cup – podcast
It’s just a week until the first whistle of the 2026 World Cup. To mark the occasion, Madeleine Finlay talks to Ian Sample about the science behind the tournament. It’s likely to be one of the hottest ever World Cups, and scientists have written to Fifa asking it to reconsider its heat mitigations for players and referees.
To fight fraud, psychological scientists issue a call to arms
To fight fraud, psychological scientists issue a call to arms Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Journalist Charlotte Cowles received a call about suspicious activity on her Amazon account. A dentist named Daniel answered a call from a number listed as the local police. Mr. Lee, a retired engineer, was told he had to marry his newfound girlfriend so she could receive an inheritance.
A MATLAB Toolbox for Standardized Reading Speed Assessment: Implementing and Extending the Perrin Sentence Generator for English Corpora
new Abstract: In the fields of vision science, cognitive psychology, and psycholinguistics, the accurate measurement of reading speed is frequently hampered by the limitations of static reading charts. Repeated testing often leads to memorization effects, while the requirement for oral recitation introduces speech-motor confounds that obscure true information processing speed. To address these methodological hurdles, this paper introduces an open-source MATLAB toolbox that adapts the...
A Model of Integrated Information Processing in Human-AI Interaction
arXiv:2606.07283v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: For Human-AI Interaction (HAII) research to move forward, theoretical work linking psychological mechanisms to interface design is needed. Such work should extend rather than replace established HCI and automation research, adapting to the increasing autonomy and agency of AI systems. Building on prior frameworks focused on roles and levels in human interaction with automation, a gap remains from a psychological view: a task-centered,...
Developing a UXR Point of View for Cognitive Accessibility in Mobile Learning with Generative AI
arXiv:2605.31149v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: This study investigates how UX research (UXR) principles, combined with Large Language Model (LLM)-supported analysis, can be used to improve the quality of requirements for mobile learning systems designed for learners with cognitive disabilities. Using the UXR Point-of-View (PoV) pyramid as a methodological framework, the study progressed through four stages: foundational structuring of psychological, behavioral, and design layers; structured...
Gleam-glum effect reveals emotional word cues in children as young as five
Gleam-glum effect reveals emotional word cues in children as young as five Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor The words "tick-tock," "hiss" and "screech" are examples of onomatopoeia because they imitate the sounds they represent: the rhythmic ticking of a clock; an angry cat, or a slowly deflating bike tire; a high-pitched scream. Onomatopoeia is a type of sound symbolism. The sounds of other words, even when they're not strict examples of onomatopoeia, also hint at their...
Octopuses use mirrors to find food they cannot see
Octopuses use mirrors to find food they cannot see Octopuses just joined an exclusive intelligence club by learning to use mirrors to find hidden food. - Date: - June 5, 2026 - Source: - Dartmouth College - Summary: - Octopuses may be even smarter than we thought.
Octopuses learn mirror-guided navigation to locate prey
Octopuses learn mirror-guided navigation to locate prey Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Octopuses are remarkably intelligent creatures, as was demonstrated by Inky the Octopus's famous escape from the National Aquarium of New Zealand through a drainpipe back to sea in 2016. A new Dartmouth study shows octopuses can use mirrors to find food out of sight, demonstrating spatial cognitive abilities. The results are published in Current Biology.
Short videos may hinder learning by fragmenting attention and memory, study finds
June 4, 2026 feature Short videos may hinder learning by fragmenting attention and memory, study finds Ingrid Fadelli Author Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Recent technological advances and the introduction of new digital media platforms have dramatically changed how people learn and source information about topics that interest them. Some recent studies have found that while browsing online or scrolling down social media platforms, users tend to spend under...
The Trump Administration Is Done With Social Science
In the summer of 1945, four days after Japan’s official surrender and a few weeks into the Atomic Age, President Harry Truman began floating the idea of an agency guided by “the free intelligence of the scientist” that would fund investigations into how the world works. As of 2024, the agency that Truman had envisioned, the National Science Foundation, supplied about one in every 10 federal research dollars going to U.S. universities. Its Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences division...