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Amazing Psychological Facts.

Our unique thinking process

By Susan ChacoffPublished 12 months ago 8 min read
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Psychology is about learning how our thoughts and actions work. Scientists have been studying why we act the way we do for many years and it will keep happening in the coming times.

Every day we learn more, but there is still a lot we don't understand yet. Some studies are more interesting than others. Using punctuation in your text messages may make you seem insincere.

Get ready to buckle up. You will have an exciting and intense experience dealing with psychology. The information below about psychology may help you understand or confirm some things.

Look at yourself or someone else. Having a backup plan makes it less likely that our original plan will work.

The University of Pennsylvania researchers observed how well people did at tasks they were given. Some people were given a task and those who thought about having a backup plan did not do as well. More than people who did not. It was discovered that when people found out they had other choices, they became less motivated.

This is about something called Expectancy Theory, which was created by a man named Victor H. Vroom was created in 1964.

Expectancy theory means that your level of motivation to do something depends on certain factors. Do you think you will do well?

A backup plan means you might not succeed the first time.

Academics suggest planning for the future is crucial, but caution against becoming overly fixated on it. You might be unknowingly stopping yourself from being successful.

Catching someone's yawn might help us feel closer to them. You just started working and you're eager to be productive. You're at work in a meeting. The person next to you talks loudly and disturbs you. Let out a big, loud and annoying yawn. You might start yawning too soon. But you don't feel sleepy yet. That's a yawn as a response.

Many ideas explain why yawns spread from one person to another, and one of the most popular is a leading theory. Responding with a yawn shows understanding and care.

This means that young kids who haven't learned how to understand and care about other people's feelings may not behave kindly. People with autism are less likely to yawn when other people yawn. We show more concern for one person than for very big problems.

In a different study done by the University of Pennsylvania, scientists studied how people act. This is about giving money to specific things that make you want to donate.

A group of people were shown a girl who was very hungry. The next group was informed about the fact that many people are passing away due to not having enough food to eat.

The third group learned about both things. People who only knew the facts gave the least amount of money, and those who learned more about the cause donated more. People who knew about the little girl gave twice as much money as the people in the statistics group. Psychologists say that if a problem seems too big, we feel like we can't do anything about it. This means that something seems unimportant and useless as if we won't gain anything from doing it. Helping one hungry girl seems easier than stopping hunger for everyone in the world.

Starting and ending points are easier to recall than the middle ones. When you want to remember something but don't have it in front of you, you can picture it in your mind and remember things that are similar to it. Start and finish. The things in the middle are a little unclear.

Research in a science journal called Frontiers of Human Neuroscience proved this. This is the name for the Serial-Position Effect. This is why you may recall the end of your boss's talk, but not the middle.

To balance out one bad thing, you need five good things. You may have heard that it's good to think about a few things at the beginning and end of your day. Think of things that make you happy or things that you appreciate.

We focus more on negative things. Balancing this by intentionally focusing on positive things can improve our overall well-being. We tend to pay attention to things that are not going well instead of things that are going well. Don't think too much about bad things that make you sad.

Try to have 5 good things for every 1 bad thing in your life. You might create something amazing.

Food is more enjoyable when someone else prepares it for you. Have you ever thought about why food tastes better when your mom cooks it? Food tastes better when someone else cooks it well. This means that when you make food for yourself, scientists believe that something happens. By the time you're ready to eat, you might not be as excited about it because it took a long time.

If something doesn't go well, you won't like it as much. We prefer to know when something bad might happen rather than being unaware and surprised Have you ever felt nervous when someone says, "We need to talk" You start thinking of lots of terrible things that could be ? If your boyfriend or girlfriend wants to end the relationship, it's better if they just tell you instead of leading you on.

If your boss wants to get rid of you, you would prefer them to tell you right away and fire you. Scientists discovered that we like having knowledge of some bad event occurring more than not knowing what might happen. This happens because our brain gets very active when it doesn't know what will happen next. To guess what might happen, both good things and bad things.

Sometimes, if a rule seems too strict, it can make us want to break even more rules. It can make them feel like their freedom or choices are being limited or threatened. This means that when someone tells them what to do, they may want to do the opposite just to prove that they are in control of their own decisions. Some people think that they are losing their freedom in order for others to have more freedom. This is best shown in young people who are between the ages of 13 and 19. When they are punished, they might leave secretly and do things that are dangerous. Behaviours can be a way of resisting or reacting to something.

Why we want to squeeze cute things, explained. Little dogs and little human beings. Do you want to love and hug them and snuggle with them? It's normal to have a feeling called Cute Aggression. An article in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience says that people like cute things because they make them feel happy. Aggression means getting really excited, usually in a good way, like when we see something we really like. When a cute puppy or baby is too much to handle, a little bit of 'sass' can help make things more manageable. We need to be careful not to hurt small creatures that did nothing wrong.

Sometimes we believe things without really meaning to because we want to accept them, even if those facts contradict what we believe. It is a tendency to only seek out information that supports our opinions and beliefs while disregarding anything that contradicts them. This means that people who think a certain way about politics like to watch or read news from places that share their same ideas. Don't even bother trying to make Uncle Fred change his opinion on global relationships. We already believe, but it also makes us ignore or discredit information that contradicts our existing beliefs. This can result in a narrow-minded and unbalanced view of the world. Confirmation bias is when we look for information that supports what we already think is true, but we don't pay attention to information that proves us wrong. This makes us see things in a very limited way. We believe something, but we may not accept information that goes against it.

People tend to like the music they listened to in high school the most because it became a part of them during that time. Good music makes your brain release happy chemicals like dopamine. Every teenager at a party has said "This is my jam. " at some point.

Oh, the time when you were in high school. During the time from 12 to 22 years old, things feel very important. Music is there. Research has found that we feel more attached to the music we liked when we were teenagers.

We remember things better as children than we do when we grow up, even after a long time. Remembering things is like putting puzzle pieces together, rather than having a clear and precise picture in your mind. False memories are things that you remember in your head, but they are not really true: Completely or partially. You actually did not start it and only realized it when you returned home. This is a common mistake that can happen when we are busy or distracted. You didn't really do it.

Our brains can sometimes make mistakes and fill in missing information when we remember things. The main idea of what happened. People see human faces in objects that don't really have faces.

Pareidolia means seeing meaningful pictures like faces even when they are not really there. Visual patterns that are hard to understand or predict. An example that many people know is the face we see on the Moon.

It is important to us that our brain has developed specialized neural mechanisms for it. This means that we are biologically wired to recognize faces and that our brain prioritizes this task over other visual processing tasks. It's better to make a fake one if there isn't a real one than to miss the real one.

When we believe people can do great things, they usually will. But if we don't expect much from them, they often won't do much either.

The Pygmalion Effect is when people do better because others believe they can do it. In the 1960s, researchers told teachers that some students were doing really well in school even though it wasn't true. This study is famous. A person's ability is measured by their IQ test score. The students who were thought to have a lot of potential did really well in the end. This is partly because their teachers expect more from them.

People's brains don't view long-term deadlines as very important, got plenty of time to get started later. Don't stress about it just yet, take a break and relax. turning a lot of work into just a few days. Small, unimportant tasks seem more attractive and need attention quickly.

You feel happy because you can complete them fast. The easy tasks make you happy because you can finish them quickly and mark them off your list.

Our brains are better at understanding deadlines that are close, like in a few days, than ones that are far away.

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About the Creator

Susan Chacoff

Hi, I have many interests which focus on spirituality, Fortune Telling, Tarot card readings, occult and business Teachings. I find these subjects inspiring and enlightening. I am a Humanitarian it is my mission to inspire and Heal.

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