What Little Babies See That You No Longer Can
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/illu...onger-can/
EXCERPT: Before developing perceptual constancy, three- to four-month-old babies have a striking ability to see image differences that are invisible to adults. They lose this superior skill around the age of five months...
Parenthood seems to have an opposite effect on how men and women perceive babies' emotions
http://digest.bps.org.uk/2016/02/parenth...osite.html
EXCERPT: In our part of the world, a growing proportion of fathers are rolling up their sleeves and getting involved in early child care. This has prompted increased interest from psychologists in any similarities or differences in the way that mothers and fathers interact with their children. One finding is that fathers tend to engage in more physical play, whereas mothers spend more time playing with toys and interacting socially. A new study in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology takes a fresh approach, asking whether mothers and fathers perceive babies' emotional expressions differently. The results, while tentative, suggest that parenthood may lead women to become more sensitive to babies' emotions, while men actually become less sensitive....
5 Antidepressant Medication Myths
http://drdeborahserani.blogspot.com/2016...myths.html
INCLUDED:
1. Antidepressants are “addictive”.
2. Antidepressants are “happy pills.”
3. Antidepressants are a "quick fix" and don't really cure depression.
4. Antidepressants will change your personality.
5. Once you start taking antidepressants, you're on them for the rest of your life.
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/illu...onger-can/
EXCERPT: Before developing perceptual constancy, three- to four-month-old babies have a striking ability to see image differences that are invisible to adults. They lose this superior skill around the age of five months...
Parenthood seems to have an opposite effect on how men and women perceive babies' emotions
http://digest.bps.org.uk/2016/02/parenth...osite.html
EXCERPT: In our part of the world, a growing proportion of fathers are rolling up their sleeves and getting involved in early child care. This has prompted increased interest from psychologists in any similarities or differences in the way that mothers and fathers interact with their children. One finding is that fathers tend to engage in more physical play, whereas mothers spend more time playing with toys and interacting socially. A new study in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology takes a fresh approach, asking whether mothers and fathers perceive babies' emotional expressions differently. The results, while tentative, suggest that parenthood may lead women to become more sensitive to babies' emotions, while men actually become less sensitive....
5 Antidepressant Medication Myths
http://drdeborahserani.blogspot.com/2016...myths.html
INCLUDED:
1. Antidepressants are “addictive”.
2. Antidepressants are “happy pills.”
3. Antidepressants are a "quick fix" and don't really cure depression.
4. Antidepressants will change your personality.
5. Once you start taking antidepressants, you're on them for the rest of your life.