• 10 ideas to change the world: Mind control over the internet

    CNN is honoring 10 emerging ideas in technology and related fields. Number six on the list is a UW team that managed to connect two brains using non-invasive technology.
    12/18/2013 | CNN
  • How abolishing the military paid off in Costa Rica

    In 1948 the president of Costa Rica announced something truly extraordinary: Henceforth, the nation would take the almost unheard-of step of renouncing its military.
    12/15/2013 | The Los Angeles Times
  • Sparrows exude personalities during fights

    Like humans, some song sparrows are more effusive than others, at least when it comes to defending their territories.
    12/03/2013 | UW Today
  • Major national companies try "sponsorship" as new hammer to break glass ceiling

    "I think the sex difference in stereotype strength says something about the extent to which gender stereotypes are established in girls early in life but reinforced pretty continuously thereafter," said Tony Greenwald
    11/14/2013 | The Washington Post
  • Researcher reveals the science behind college drinking

    Alcohol may not be the social lubricant everyone thinks it is, according to University of Washington health psychologist Jason Kilmer.
    10/31/2013 | University of Virginia The Cavalier Daily
  • Sex and the single organism

    In a guest piece, David Barash, professor of psychology, looks at several recent books on evolutionary science that consider reproduction.
    10/14/2013 | The Chronicle of Higher Education
  • Are we hard-wired for war?

    UW psychology professor David P. Barash says there's evidence that cooperation may have played just as much of a role in human evolution as war did.
    09/28/2013 | The New York Times
  • Fathering against type

    In an op-ed piece, David Barash, professor of psychology, argues that because of biology, mammalian male parents may act in ways that are less than admirable, but human dads can trump nature.
    06/15/2013 | Los Angeles Times
  • Columnist Sue Shellenbarger Answers Readers' Questions

    Wall Street Journal columnist Sue Shellenbarger responds to a question about healthy self-esteem in children by suggesting work by John Gottman, professor emeritus of psychology.
    05/28/2013 | Wall Street Journal
  • What Does Modern Prejudice Look Like?

    In a new book, Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good People, Anthony Greenwald, a social psychologist at the University of Washington, and co-author Mahzarin Banaji turn the conventional way people think about prejudice on its head.
    04/23/2013 | NPR.org
  • Obama proposal reflects shift in views on early childhood education

    President Obama's call for universal preschool in his State of the Union address underlines a national shift in thinking about early childhood education. Andrew Meltzoff, co-director of the Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences. is quoted..
    02/13/2013 | Washington Post
  • I-LABS findings featured in Wall Street Journal

    Infants as young as 6 months are capable of making predictions based on probability, a higher level of reasoning than is commonly believed possible, researchers have found.
    02/12/2013 | Wall Street Journal
  • Song sparrows escalate territorial threats

    Research from the Department of Psychology shows territorial song sparrows use increasingly threatening signals to ward off trespassing rivals.
    02/12/2013 | UW Today
  • New book looks at how personal biases form and impact our decisions

    The Bellingham Herald reviews "Blind Spot: Hidden Biases of Good People," by Anthony Greenwald, professor of psychology, and Mahzarin Banaji, of Harvard.
    02/07/2013 | Bellingham Herald
  • Brain structure of infants predicts language skills at 1 year

    Researchers at the Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences have found that the anatomy of certain brain areas - the hippocampus and cerebellum - can predict children's language abilities at 1 year of age.
    01/28/2013 | UW Today