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Psychology for You!

  • Issue
    10/2025

    Starting early: How caregivers can support their children's emotion regulation

    • written by
    • Katharina Demke,
    • Mara Hüttner,
    • Dr. Avelina Lovis Schmidt

    Emotion regulation in children can be challenging: screaming, loud crying, temper tantrums at the supermarket checkout - many people are familiar with such situations. What role do caregivers play in these moments, and how can they effectively support their children? The good news is that even small actions can have a lasting positive effect, strengthening children’s emotion regulation for life.

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  • Issue
    09/2025

    Viral and harmful: Violence in media and its impact on empathy

    • written by
    • Mira Fauth-Bühler

    From fight videos on TikTok to hate comments on Instagram, violence is omnipresent online, but what does it do to our empathy? Studies reveal that repeated exposure to digital aggression can reduce our ability to feel concern or discomfort when witnessing others' pain, especially in teens. Yet empathy doesn’t have to erode. This article explains how online violence affects our ability to care and offers practical strategies to maintain compassion in virtual spaces and effectively strengthen empathy over the long term.

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  • Issue
    09/2025

    Internet, dating, addiction: A match made in heaven

    • written by
    • Marina F. Thomas,
    • Sylvia Dörfler,
    • Gloria Mittmann,
    • Verena Steiner-Hofbauer

    Dating apps are said to have turned dating into an addiction. Instead of efficiently connecting people for in-person dates, users may get lost in “binge swiping”. But what makes it so hard to stop swiping – and when does it become a problem? We review existing research and explain what researchers mean by “online dating addiction”, why the science isn’t so simple, and what you can do to resist the pull.

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  • Issue
    09/2025

    Digital moral distortion: How social media can negatively shape our judgement of right and wrong

    • written by
    • Tim-Dorian Knöchel,
    • Sarah Vahed

    Social media is far more than a tool for communication, it is a digital social environment at scale. Unlike any other space before it, social media platforms expose us to the judgements of others. From expressions of admiration to condemnation, we are immersed in the opinions of others with unprecedented frequency. In this article, we explore how such online environments hold the potential to distort our perception of societal consensus on core moral issues and influence our understanding of what is considered right and wrong in society.

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  • Issue
    09/2025

    The viral power of migrant crime messaging: Fear, emotion, and algorithms

    • written by
    • Mary Ortega

    Fear-driven stories about migrant crime continue to circulate widely across social media platforms. This article examines how emotional triggers, psychological shortcuts, and platform design interact to influence public perception. The result is a digital environment where fear spreads faster than facts and reinforces harmful stereotypes.

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  • Magazine Issue 10/2025

    Starting early: How caregivers can support their children's emotion regulation

    written by: Katharina Demke, Mara Hüttner, Dr. Avelina Lovis Schmidt
  • Magazine Issue 09/2025

    Viral and harmful: Violence in media and its impact on empathy

    written by: Mira Fauth-Bühler
  • Magazine Issue 09/2025

    Internet, dating, addiction: A match made in heaven

    written by: Marina F. Thomas, Sylvia Dörfler, Gloria Mittmann, Verena Steiner-Hofbauer
  • Magazine Issue 09/2025

    Digital moral distortion: How social media can negatively shape our judgement of right and wrong

    written by: Tim-Dorian Knöchel, Sarah Vahed

In-Mind Blog

  • 30.08.2014 |

    Look at me! (Or don’t): Of society and showing off on Facebook

    by: Robert Thomson
    Shameless self-promotion on Facebook. Love it or hate it, there’s always someone doing it. And many of us are guilty of it. But why do we do it? Comparing Facebook... more
  • 28.08.2014 |

    Can you replicate that?

    by: Aaron Moss
    The two previous “Solid Science” posts for this blog have covered important changes taking place in experimental psychology. If you have not read them, I recommend you do (post1, post2)... more
  • 18.08.2014 |

    Blame. What is it good for?

    by: Andrew Monroe
    Humans blame, and perhaps only humans do, but what is blame for? Is blame about meting out retribution and revenge? Or is blame a tool for managing others’ behavior? I... more
  • 28.07.2014 |

    Foul-weather friends: Social psychology and school aggression

    by: Sian Jones
    One classic study showed that when children intervene in bullying, it stopped within 10 seconds in 57% of episodes. This clearly speaks to the vital role bystanders play in helping... more
  • 14.07.2014 |

    Smile! And I tell you where you’re from

    by: Marieke van Egmond
    Although a popular belief (and a heartwarming children’s song) hold that we all laugh in the same language, recent research has found that people are remarkably adapt at detecting local... more
  • 09.07.2014 |

    Smartphones: A threat to well-being?

    by: Alina Feinholdt
    Nowadays, smartphones appear to play an inevitable role both in our work and private life. However, when it comes to work-related use, smartphones can hamper recovery and thus, pose a... more
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Book Reviews

Pause Button Therapy

by: Christopher Perez

Most Read

  • Magazine Issue 02/2021

    When I Get That Boring Feeling: Sex as Escape from Boredom

    by: Andrew Moynihan
  • Magazine Issue 09/2025

    Scrolling against hate: Developing critical media competence to counter online antisemitism

    by: Agata Maria Kraj, Özen Odağ, Larisa Buhin, Jannis Niedick, Justine Kohl, Linda P. Juang
  • Magazine Issue 06/2024

    Psychological Aspects of Elite Performance in New Olympic Disciplines: The Case of Climbing

    by: Xavier Sanchez, Julian Henz, Cécile Martha, Jerry Prosper Medernach
  • Magazine Issue 06/2025

    Why we’d buy a microwave from BODIKA_1996 but not from KODIBA_1996 – Articulation movements and their effects on judgments and decisions

    by: Moritz Ingendahl
  • Magazine Issue 05/2024

    Never fear, a moral expert is here

    by: Susanne M. Schmittat, Pascal Burgmer

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In-Mind is a voluntary science communication project. We enable scientifically working psychologists to present their research topics in a scientifically sound, understandable and entertaining way for an interested audience: Psychology by scientists for everyone. More

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