Post Grid 01
Pets

My awesome pet!

I have a female German shepherd. She plays around in the house and always runs here and there. It was a few years back as while playing she knocked off one of the flower pot in the balcony and she could hurt herself. Seeing this I got angry and at the heat of the moment, […]

Read More
Research

Survivors’ near-miss experiences on 9/11 linked to post-traumatic stress

“There is a misfortunate to being a fortunate”, says the associate professor of psychology and author of the paper published in the Journal Social Psychology and personality sciences. Near miss experiences—narrowly avoiding a traumatic event—are associated with distress, despite signaling good fortune. For some, near miss experiences call to mind those who, unlike oneself, were […]

Read More
Awareness

Unlearning

A boy and his father get into a car accident and are rushed to the hospital. The father dies on the way and the son is in a critical condition. His surgeon walks into the operating room and exclaims, “I cannot operate on him, he is my son!” How could that be? Maybe you know […]

Read More
Pets

My cheerful rabbit!

It literally enhances my mental state and helps to reduce my stress whenever I’m tired and feel appalling. It teaches me the lesson of honesty, caring for someone selflessly. It is peaceful whenever it licks my palm n face. Only by having a look at it, I feel happy and cheerful… It’s lying with me […]

Read More
Research

Foodie calls: dating for a free meal (rather than a relationship)

When it comes to dating, there is a lot of possibilities that people can present themselves and their interest in any number of ways. One of the newer phenomena is a ‘foodie call’ where a person sets up a date with someone they are not romantically attracted to, but for a purpose of getting a […]

Read More
Parenting

Are you ready for your child’s first day at school?

Some happy and cheerful kids; some anxious toddlers; some crying & screaming; some droning and some watching silently with submissiveness, eyes filled with tears; some holding the hand of their parents tightly and forcefully, Children distressed by separation anxiety; parents worried on seeing their children so agitated and suddenly we see a mother thrusts her […]

Read More
Research

Industrial /Organizational Psychology Goes To Mars

Research by a group of PhD and doctorate level industrial organizational psychologist is guiding efforts to promote team cohesion among astronauts during the longest- ever manned space voyage: NASA’s planned 2030 trip to Mars. A team of few I/O psychologist are working on the different problems that would be faced in this mission. The mission […]

Read More
Research

Dogs May Have Evolved With ‘Puppy Dog Eyes’ To Communicate With Humans, Study Finds

Have you ever fallen for those cute little ‘puppy dog eyes’? Don’t worry that’s not your fault. There is a new study that found that dogs have evolved new facial muscles specifically to get catch hold of your heartstrings over the course of thousands of years of domestication. Unlike wolves, dogs have a muscle responsible […]

Read More
News

Gender is not just a social construct

A new study published on NCBI on 5th March 2019 done by Wheelock. et. al. states that during human gestation itself the sexual dimorphism ends up emerging in functional brain systems. The study focused on the way individual genes were transcribed in the human brain (from the prenatal period to adulthood).  During the study, MRI […]

Read More
Social

Unexplained bond between animals and humans

Since the evolution of human beings, there is a strong suggestion of the bonding and correlation between animals and humans. Animals have played a big role in the development of human society. In the stone and the medieval ages they were not only a source of food and transportation but the future of the kingdoms […]

Read More