Cornelia Monyeki
Bio
Stories (4/0)
Psychology can change your mind
Psychology has the power to improve relationships, heal mental wounds, and help cope with difficult circumstances. However, it can also save your life. The bystander effect is a phenomenon where the more bystanders are present in a crisis, the less likely they are to intervene. A 2019 study found that additional bystanders reduce the chances of intervention, especially if they were strangers. Researchers suggest that in emergencies, trigger intervention by pointing at individual bystanders and delegating specific actions like calling the police.
By Cornelia Monyeki9 months ago in Families
6 Interesting Psychological Facts about Human Behaviour
In this text, today we explore 6 psychological facts about human behavior that are often overlooked or dismissed. These facts highlight the shared psychological roots of our shared humanity, which can lead to misconceptions about how real humans think, feel, and work and challanges faced daily humans.
By Cornelia Monyeki9 months ago in Humans
Are Cell Phones Mutating the Shape of Our Bones?
What if cell phones were so potent, they could alter the shape of our bones? This intriguing new debate has recently erupted in the media. It is based on a scientific study that contents using cell phones and tablets can alter our bodies in significant and unfavorable ways. David Shahar and Mark Sayers, biomechanics specialists at the University of the Sunshine Coast in Australia, conducted research in recent years examining the application of mechanical rules to biological things, including how humans run and how insects beat their wings. In Shahar and Sayers' research, autobiography is also utilized to infer information about a person's life from their bones. Every set of bones tells a story, and it has long been known that skeletons can change to fit a person's lifestyle. For instance, some unusually large skeletons were discovered on the Pacific Island of Tinian in 1924; stone buildings nearby explained the substantial nature of the islanders' bones by explaining that working with heavy stones had naturally resulted in larger arms, legs, and collarbones; and over in Australia. Shaw Heart and Sayers contend that contemporary technology is reshaping the bones of young people. How is this going? Everything has to do with an EOP or external occipital process.
By Cornelia Monyeki9 months ago in Humans
How The Internet is CHANGING Your Brain
Just consider what life would be like without the internet. Some of us may even recall a time before everything was connected, but the idea of living without smartphone maps where search engines ran at our fingertips now seems completely foreign. However, how is our increasing reliance on the online world affecting us? Our relationships, sources of information, and the way we interact with one another are all changing quickly, and there are even noticeable effects occurring within our China has 721 million users, followed by India and then the other two top-ranked nations.
By Cornelia Monyeki9 months ago in Humans