Watching sensationalized, people-pandering content can slowly erode your ability to tell right from wrong. Imagine scrolling through your social media feed, only to come across a news headline that ...
Co-authored by Nikita Baxi and Robert T. Muller, Ph.D. In the age of the internet, the desire to stay informed about global events often comes at a cost—a cost to our mental health and moral values.
According to Glasgow and HSE/Northumbria researchers, repetition of non-verbs as well as verbs can boost the effect of syntactic priming, i.e. the likelihood of people reproducing the structure of the ...
Citations: Nordhielm, Christie. 2002. The Influence of Level of Processing on Advertising Repetition Effects. Journal of Consumer Research. (3)371-382.