Trust in the Time of Coronavirus: Low Trusters are Particularly Skeptical of Local Officials and Their Own Neighbors UncategorizedApril 13, 2020Behavior, social psychology, trust
Behavioral Altruism is an Unhelpful Scientific Category UncategorizedJanuary 30, 2019Behavior, Cooperation, Evolution, Evolutionary Psychology, experimental economics, trust
The Concept of Validity is Much, Much Simpler Than You Think (a Chip off the Old Blog) UncategorizedSeptember 24, 2017Behavior, research methods, social psychology
Human Oxytocin Research Gets a Drubbing UncategorizedMay 20, 2015Behavior, humans, oxytocin, research methods
A P-Curve Exercise That Might Restore Some of Your Faith in Psychology UncategorizedDecember 4, 2014Behavior, Evolutionary Psychology, false positives, psychology, replication, social psychology
The Myth of Moral Outrage UncategorizedAugust 6, 2014anger, Behavior, experimental economics, moral outrage, morality, research methods, social psychology, third-party punishment game
The Trouble with Oxytocin, Part III: The Noose Tightens for The Oxytocin-->Trust Hypothesis UncategorizedJune 25, 2014Behavior, Cooperation, Evolution, Evolutionary Psychology, experimental economics, oxytocin, replication, trust
Of Crackers and Quackers: Human-Duck Social Interaction is Regulated by Indirect Reciprocity (A Satire) SatireJune 11, 2014Behavior, Cooperation, Evolution, indirect reciprocity, natural selection
I’m feeling Edge-y about Human Evolutionary Exceptionalism UncategorizedJanuary 16, 2014Behavior, Cooperation, Edge, Evolution, human, Language