Monday, April 12, 2010

Study: Spanking Kids Leads to More Aggressive Behavior - Yahoo! News

Study: Spanking Kids Leads to More Aggressive Behavior - Yahoo! News

Disciplining young children is one of the key jobs of any parent - most people would have no trouble agreeing with that. But whether or not that discipline should include spanking or other forms of corporal punishment is a far trickier issue.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) does not endorse spanking for any reason, citing its lack of long-term effectiveness as a behavior-changing tactic. Instead the AAP supports strategies such as "time-outs" when children misbehave, which focus on getting kids to reflect on their behavior and the consequences of their actions. Still, as many parents can attest, few responses bring about the immediate interruption of a full-blown tantrum like a swift whack to the bottom. (See pictures of the evolution of the college dorm.)

Now researchers at Tulane University provide the strongest evidence yet against the use of spanking: of the nearly 2,500 youngsters in the study, those who were spanked more frequently at age 3 were more likely to be aggressive by age 5. The research supports earlier work on the pitfalls of corporal punishment, including a study by Duke University researchers that revealed that infants who were spanked at 12 months scored lower on cognitive tests at age 3.

"I'm excited by the idea that there is now some nice hard data that can back up clinicians when they share their caution with parents against using corporal punishment," says Dr. Jayne Singer, clinical director of the child and parent program at Children's Hospital Boston, who was not involved in the study. (Read "Should Kids Be Bribed to Do Well in School?")

Led by Catherine Taylor, the Tulane study was the first to control simultaneously for variables that are most likely to confound the association between spanking and later aggressive behavior. The researchers accounted for factors such as acts of neglect by the mother, violence or aggression between the parents, maternal stress and depression, the mother's use of alcohol and drugs, and even whether the mother considered abortion while pregnant with the child.

Each of these factors contributed to children's aggressive behavior at age 5, but they could not explain all of the violent tendencies at that age. Further, the positive connection between spanking and aggression remained strong, even after these factors had been accounted for. ...

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Small Number Of Adults 'Supertaskers,' Study Finds

Small Number Of Adults 'Supertaskers,' Study Finds

A recent study by scientists at the University of Utah confirms that multitasking is an activity for an elite few.

The Daily Utah Chronicle has more:

The term "supertasker" is given to individuals able to successfully accomplish two or more tasks at once -- a quality possessed by less than 2.5 percent of people.


"(Supertaskers) perform better," said David Strayer, professor of psychology and coordinator of the study. They are able to perform multiple tasks without a problem, he said.

In this round of research, scientists tested 200 people doing multiple things at once. They hope to continue their study by testing military fighter pilots.

Wired For Choice - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

Wired For Choice - | The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

Capuchin monkeys like change:
The implications of this simple experiment shed some light on consumer behavior, [Dan Ariely, the James B. Duke Professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University] said. Earlier work on variety-seeking has found that people eat 43 percent more M&M candies when there are 10 colors in the bowl instead of just seven. "People choose variety for variety's sake," Ariely said. "They often choose things they don't even like as well just for the variety. We knew about this, so the interesting thing was to figure out how basic it is."