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Internet, dating, addiction: A match made in heaven

written by Marina F. Thomas, Sylvia Dörfler, Gloria Mittmann & Verena Steiner-Hofbauer

Digital moral distortion: How social media can negatively shape our judgement of right and wrong

written by Tim-Dorian Knöchel & Sarah Vahed

The viral power of migrant crime messaging: Fear, emotion, and algorithms

written by Mary Ortega

Dressed for the feed: The psychology of fashion in a filtered world

written by Paola D'Elia

Covert control: How political elites and influencers use manipulation on social media

written by Meredith M. Turner & Sara Holland Levin

Scrolling against hate: Developing critical media competence to counter online antisemitism

written by Agata Maria Kraj, Özen Odağ, Larisa Buhin, Jannis Niedick, Justine Kohl, Linda P. Juang & Gudrun Dobslaw

Social media use towards self-diagnosing and health anxiety

written by Lili R. Romann

FOMO: The fun everybody else has

written by Carolin Lehmann

Viral and harmful: Violence in media and its impact on empathy

written by Mira Fauth-Bühler

3 results for „forgotten details“
found in | magazine issue | 11/2015

Seeing and Believing: Common Courtroom Myths in Eyewitness Memory

... her over several hours. The young, white victim reported key details of the rapist to investigators (a black man with short hair and a thin ... that eyewitnesses can be inaccurate, but it can easily be forgotten, ignored, or lost in translation when applied to investigatory and ... / more
found in | Blog Post

Wait, What?! The Stanford Prison Experiment was pre-tested?

... remember well denying  medication  to a student who had forgotten to list it on her medical requirements form. I remember, too, that ... than what I think most people take them for. The exact details of what instructions Carlo Prescott gave to the guards and how badly ... / more
found in | magazine issue | 01/2020

Can We Believe in Our Own Lies?

... recent line of research has shown that falsely denying details of an event impairs memory (e.g., [13] ; [14] ). The basic ... and genuine information of the event (e.g., crime) can be forgotten ( [28] ; [29] ; [30] ; [31] ; [32] ; [33] ). The ... / more

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