Psychology
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- Media character use on food packaging appears to influence children"s taste assessment
- Alcohol consumption after age 75 associated with lower risk of developing dementia
- Men in low income neighborhoods drink more than women
- Genes associated with binge drinking identified
- Planning and visualization lead to better food habits
- Moderate-to-heavy alcohol intake may increase risk of atrial fibrillation
- Eating berries may lower risk of Parkinson"s
- How omega-3 fatty acids help prevent several forms of blindness
- What makes fructose fattening? Some answers found in the brain
- Rural underage binge drinkers put their health at risk, German study finds
- Family mealtimes play a role in health of children with asthma
- Non-alcoholic energy drinks may pose "high" health risks, experts argue
- Study of nutrition, Alzheimer"s links hampered by research approach
- Advocacy in tight fiscal environment vital to reducing heart disease and stroke
- Reducing diet early in pregnancy stunts fetal brain development, study finds
- Protective properties of green tea uncovered
- Mothers" diets have biggest influence on children eating healthy, study suggests
- Fast food and sweets advertised when children watch television
- Many brain tumor patients use homeopathy, alternative treatments
- Thought for food: Imagining food consumption reduces actual consumption
- Do our bodies" bacteria play matchmaker?
- Why the road to health is paved with, often unrealised, good intentions
- Guiltless gluttony: Misleading size labels lead to overeating
- Psychology
- Poor behavior doesn"t always lead to poor academics
- What choice do we have?
- Skills training can improve responses to disclosures of trauma
- Marijuana use may hurt intellectual skills in multiple sclerosis patients
- Indications of Alzheimer"s disease may be evident decades before first signs of cognitive impairment
- Mothers" hard work pays off with big brains for their babies
- Deciphering hidden code reveals brain activity
- "Can you hear me now?" How neurons decide how to transmit information
- Tourettes brains are structured for greater, not lesser, cognitive motor control