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Psychology for You!

  • Issue
    11/2025

    Mastering Emotions: How Emotion Regulation Can Boost Your Athletic Performance

    • written by
    • Mira Fauth-Bühler

    Imagine standing on a balance beam. Your heart races, your palms sweat—your body is primed for peak performance. Now comes the crucial decision: how will you steer your emotions? Will you let the tension paralyze you, or harness it as your driving force? Emotion regulation doesn’t mean avoiding fear; it means transforming it into focus and confidence. In this article, you’ll discover how targeted emotion regulation techniques can help you unlock your full potential and perform at your best, even under pressure.

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  • Issue
    11/2025

    Plant-based, insect-based, or cultivated meat alternatives—Why do we (not) consume them?

    • written by
    • Lena Szczepanski,
    • Milan Büscher,
    • Lene Strootmann,
    • Florian Fiebelkorn

    Meat alternatives have become a fixture on supermarket shelves. While people have been consuming plant-based alternatives for a long time, the consumption of insects and, in the future, cultivated meat faces major challenges. What factors drive people to consume meat alternatives? And why do many people still find it so difficult to replace meat in their diet? Personal values, product perceptions, and social influence play decisive roles in our food choices, especially when it comes to replacing familiar products with alternatives. In this article, we thus examine the psychological factors that promote or hinder the consumption of meat alternatives, as well as the barriers that still need to be overcome.

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  • Issue
    11/2025

    Self-Care in the Digital Age: How We Can Handle Social Media in a Healthy Way

    • written by
    • Marvin Holtwiesche,
    • Mira Fauth-Bühler

    Do you find it difficult to reduce the time you spend on social media in the long term? Are you interested in learning why you often use social media excessively and what negative effects this can have on you? Here, you'll not only find answers but also practical strategies to protect your mental health, helping you achieve a balanced approach to social media use.

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  • Issue
    11/2025

    Language models: A new perspective on language and cognition

    • written by
    • Sam Boeve

    How do computers help us understand language acquisition? What do ChatGPT and text readability scores have in common? Language models are no longer just a useful technology; they are a window into our own linguistic abilities. Discover how these systems not only generate text but also challenge and deepen insights from the psychology of language.

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  • Issue
    11/2025

    Understanding Anxiety, Encouraging Courage: What Families Should Know About Social Anxiety

    • written by
    • Nadine Vietmeier,
    • Jasper Froehlich,
    • Silas Rooß

    Social anxiety is among the most common psychological challenges in childhood and adolescence—and it also presents major challenges for parents. How can they support their children without overwhelming them? What role does parental behavior play in the development and maintenance of anxiety? This article introduces the SPACE therapy program—a research-based parent training that shows how mothers and fathers can empathetically support their children in gradually overcoming social anxiety.

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  • Magazine Issue 11/2025

    Mastering Emotions: How Emotion Regulation Can Boost Your Athletic Performance

    written by: Mira Fauth-Bühler
  • Magazine Issue 11/2025

    Plant-based, insect-based, or cultivated meat alternatives—Why do we (not) consume them?

    written by: Lena Szczepanski, Milan Büscher, Lene Strootmann, Florian Fiebelkorn
  • Magazine Issue 11/2025

    Self-Care in the Digital Age: How We Can Handle Social Media in a Healthy Way

    written by: Marvin Holtwiesche, Mira Fauth-Bühler
  • Magazine Issue 11/2025

    Language models: A new perspective on language and cognition

    written by: Sam Boeve
  • Magazine Issue 06/2024

    Essential Psychological Aspects of the Olympic Mind

    written by: Nico W. Van Yperen
    It is a common myth that perfection and ‘rising above yourself’ are required to clinch Olympic gold. Very rarely, however, do athletes realize a perfect race or match. If athletes... more
  • Magazine Issue 06/2024

    There is no place like home – How the French crowd may impact the athletes at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games

    written by: Edda van Meurs, Charlotte Behlau, Bernd Strauss
    Athletes and fans believe to be superior when competing at home. Will the French believe the same at this year’s Olympics in Paris? We review the psychological explanations for a... more
  • Magazine Issue 05/2024

    Never fear, a moral expert is here

    written by: Susanne M. Schmittat, Pascal Burgmer
    Editorial Assitant: Stella Wernicke Note: This article was already reviewed and is published in the German version of In-Mind. Can I read the diaries of my deceased daughter? Can I... more
  • Magazine Issue 05/2024

    Climate Stress in Everyday Life: How Can We Support Children?

    written by: Julia Asbrand, Felix Peter, Claudia Calvano, Lea Dohm
    The climate crisis leads to significant changes in nature and ultimately in our society challenging all of us. Children and adolescents are particularly vulnerable in their mental processing, as well... more
  • Magazine Issue 05/2024

    Tilting at windmills: How conspiracy theories hinder climate action and what to do about it

    written by: Kevin Winter, Lotte Pummerer
    Conspiracy theories about climate change are common. People who believe in them show less climate-friendly attitudes and behaviors. But there are ways to reduce the impact of conspiracy theories in... more
  • Magazine Issue 04/2024

    Horoscopes – why we believe in them

    written by: Lea Sperlich
    When reading horoscopes, we often find sentences like: "Sometimes you are extroverted, sociable, and open-minded, sometimes rather introverted, skeptical, and reserved." If you feel that this statement applies to you... more
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In-Mind Blog

  • 28.12.2017 | Announcements and News

    Call for Papers

    by: Matthew Baldwin, Lucas Keefer
    Call for Papers: In-Mind Magazine We invite you to submit short review articles for In-Mind Magazine, the flagship online journal of the In-Mind Foundation. In-Mind Magazine is a peer-reviewed online journal that publishes short reviews (about 2,500 words) of topics in all fields of psychology. Our... more
  • 18.02.2017 | Other

    Adverse Childhood Experiences and its lifelong consequences

    by: Marly van Oirschot
    Unfortunately, some children grow up with maltreatment and household dysfunction. In this post, I will explain how these adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) not only have a negative influence during childhood, but later on in life as well, and I will give some advice about how to prevent these long-lasting negative outcomes. more
  • 07.03.2016 | Race & Ethnicity, Culture

    Marginal and Happy – How can people be culturally detached and well adjusted?

    by: Régine Debrosse
    Belonging to several cultural groups at the same time can be associated with complex feelings of group membership. In this post, I will provide an explanation for the phenomenon whereby many immigrants marginalize—feel detached from the mainstream culture they live in and the heritage culture they grew up in—while feeling happy. more
  • 07.02.2016 | Political Psychology

    Are conservatives really simple-minded?

    by: Lucian Gideon Conway III
    The current consensus in psychology is that political conservatives are uniquely simple-minded. Indeed, even the famous critic of political bias and Heterodox contributor Jonathan Haidt (and colleagues) suggested that there is a “consistent difference between liberals and conservatives” on several measurements related to cognitive complexity (Joseph, Graham, & Haidt, 2009, p. 176). more
  • 30.01.2016 | Meaning Making

    Foetus or child? Language and attitudes toward abortion

    by: Gosia Mikołajczak
    Due to moral, religious and cultural sensibilities, the topic of abortion still gives rise to controversy in many countries. In this post, I will discuss our research showing how language used in abortion discourse can affect people’s attitudes by changing their attributions of humanity to unborn (Mikołajczak & Bilewicz, 2015). more
  • 13.12.2015 | Big Questions in Society

    Refugees work placement: Call for collaboration

    by: Sanja Djordjevic
    In the Netherlands only, more than 25.000 refugees arrived this year, and the numbers are rapidly increasing. One of the biggest challenges for refugees is to acclimatize, adapt, and find jobs in a new country. As a group of behavioral change experts, we want to help them, but we need some expert collaborators. This is a call for collaboration with a programmer, translator, and refugee organizations. more
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Book Reviews

The meaning: poetic and spiritual reflections

by: Richard Skaff

Free will and consciousness: how might they work?

by: Wim Pouw

Handbook of cxperimental existential psychology

by: Wim Pouw

Confessions of a sociopath: A life spent hiding in plain sight

by: Irena Domachowska

Skill sheets. An integrated approach to research, study and management

by: Irena Domachowska

Most Read

  • Magazine Issue 08/2024

    Bug or feature? Boredom feels aversive, and this is why it matters

    by: Wanja Wolff, Katja Rewitz, Dr. Maik Bieleke
  • Magazine Issue 01/2020

    Can We Believe in Our Own Lies?

    by: Fabiana Battista, Ivan Mangiulli, Antonietta Curci, Paul Riesthuis, Henry Otgaar
  • Magazine Issue 10/2016

    Elephants and Donkeys Are Killing The United States: Why We Need Political Diversity

    by: Kate Johnson
  • Magazine Issue 04/2014

    What can metaphors tell us about personality?

    by: Adam Fetterman, Michael Robinson
  • Magazine Issue 06/2008

    Love at First Sight

    by: Stephen Bertman

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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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