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Maia ten Brink is awarded two dissertation fellowships
5th year affective science graduate student Maia ten Brink was awarded two fellowships, the P.E.O. Scholars Award from P.E.O. International and the American Dissertation Fellowship from the American Association of University Women (AAUW). Both are merit-based scholarships for women doctoral students at the dissertation writing stage of their degree. Maia is available to speak to any interested women graduate students in any department thinking of applying (applications open in fall).
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Modeling How People Make Causal Judgments
By providing quantitative predictions of how people think about causation, Stanford researchers offer a bridge between psychology and artificial intelligence. Read more about Professors Gerstenberg and Goodman's computational model in this article by the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI.
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Philip Zimbardo's oral history, My Life Revealed, published
In a direct and spontaneous dialogue, the legendary American psychologist Philip Zimbardo talks about his life and career. Edited by Daniel Hartwig, My Life Revealed is in interview form and is part of the Stanford Historical Society's Oral History Program in collaboration with the Stanford University Archives.
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- "Gender Categories as Dual-Character Concepts?" by Cai Guo, Carol S. Dweck, and Ellen M. Markman, published in May 2021 in Cognitive Science.
- "Pregnancy during the pandemic: the impact of COVID-19-related stress on risk for prenatal depression" by Lucy S. King, Daisy E. Feddoes, Jaclyn S. Kirshenbaum, Kathryn L. Humphreys, and Ian H. Gotlib, published in March 2021 in Psychological Medicine.
- "Describing and Controlling Multivariate Nonlinear Dynamics: A Boolean Network Approach" by Xiao Yang, Nilam Ram, Peter C. M. Molenaar, and Pamela M. Cole, published in April 2021 in Multivariate Behavioral Research.
- "A counterfactual simulation model of causal judgments for physical events" by Tobias Gerstenberg, Noah D. Goodman, David A Lagnado, and Joshua B. Tenenbaum, published in June 2021 in Psychological Review.
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The Department of Psychology at Stanford University is dedicated to advancing knowledge of modern Psychology through research and teaching. Your contribution, large or small, makes a big difference by supporting grants for undergraduate research, graduate student fellowships, course development and enhancement, and commencement awards. Make a gift today!
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