Tuesday, February 23, 2010

A New Approach to College Admission

With admissions to colleges and universities continuing to be ultra-competitive, creative students have stumbled onto a potential goldmine when it comes to setting themselves apart from the crowd.  Technology appears to be the key to impressing admissions officials. 

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Are you sleep deprived?

Chances are you are likely in need of more sleep than you are getting.  Does your cat wake you up throughout the night or do you stay up too late after procrastinating with your homework? No matter the cause, you are functioning (somehow) with too little REM sleep and it is having negative impacts on your life.  How can you tell that your sack time is not enough?  Check out the article...

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Do You Spend Too Much Time Online?

A recent study found a correlation between excessive internet use and depression.  Find out more:

"Researchers found striking evidence that some users have developed a compulsive internet habit, whereby they replace real-life social interaction with online chat rooms and social networking sites. The results suggest that this type of addictive surfing can have a serious impact on mental health."
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/02/100202193605.htm

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Whatever Happened to Little Albert?

Hall Beck, a psychologist from Appalacian State University, spent the past seven years researching the true identity and life of "Little Albert."  He used census data, interviews with the little boys family members, and even FBI facial recognition testing to form his conclusion:

"'Little Albert' and his mother moved away from the university, his identity was lost and for years psychologists and historians have wondered what happened to the unwilling star in one of the landmark studies of the 20th century. The first step was to find out exactly when the experiments took place and then to try and identify Albert's mother from the information given in Watson's original studies.
Careful sifting of financial and residency records put the researchers onto a campus wet nurse called Arvilla Merritte, but there the trail went cold.
There were no others traces of Arvilla Merritte but a search for her maiden name, Arvilla Irons, revealed that her married name was likely fictitious to hide the fact that her baby was illegitimate.
However, Irons' baby was not called Albert, but Douglas, and it wasn't until the Irons family got in touch to send a photo of the baby that the researchers could try and make a physical comparison.
The photos were blurry and they recruited the help of an FBI forensics expert to compare the images. The comparison suggested that the photos were likely of the same person and with the other matching biographical details it seems very likely that Douglas Merritte was indeed 'Little Albert'.
The story has a tragic ending, however, as Douglas Merritte died when only six years old after developing hydrocephalus, a build up of fluid in the brain, possibly due to a meningitis infection.
Beck finishes the article on a melancholy note, reflecting on his own part in the story, Little Albert's short life and his visit to his grave:
As I watched Gary and Helen put flowers on the grave, I recalled a daydream in which I had envisioned showing a puzzled old man Watson’s film of him as a baby. My small fantasy was among the dozens of misconceptions and myths inspired by Douglas.
"The sunbeam’s smile, the zephyr’s breath, All that it knew from birth to death."
None of the folktales we encountered during our inquiry had a factual basis. There is no evidence that the baby’s mother was “outraged” at her son’s treatment or that Douglas’s phobia proved resistant to extinction. Douglas was never deconditioned, and he was not adopted by a family north of Baltimore.
Nor was he ever an old man. Our search of seven years was longer than the little boy’s life. I laid flowers on the grave of my longtime “companion,” turned, and simultaneously felt a great peace and profound loneliness."
www.mindhacks.com