- However you spin it, handedness changes with aging.
- How Sapir-Whorf may still have life (via Mind Hacks). But see this analysis of the same data set.
- How labels help us learn.
- How computers help writers.
- How you can get a job like Greta's -- or Chad's.
- How neurons communicate with each other.
- How computers might someday communicate with neurons.
Cognitive Daily
A new cognitive psychology article nearly every day
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Cognitive Daily reports nearly every day on fascinating peer-reviewed developments in cognition from the most respected scientists in the field.
Greta Munger is Professor of Psychology at Davidson College whose works include The History of Psychology: Fundamental Questions. Dave Munger is co-founder and president of ResearchBlogging.org and a writer whose works include Researching Online. And yes, he is married to Greta.
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« Want to drive safely? Talking to passengers may be okay, but talking on the phone isn't | Main | Research ethics, bloggers, and "the public" »
Optimists: We become ambidextrous as we age; Pessimists: We lose skill in dominant hand as we age
Category: In other news
Posted on: January 24, 2007 5:11 PM, by Dave Munger




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