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Journals Psychology Newsletter for 2026-03-11 ( 4 items )  
Dark personality levels relate to people's job interests and chosen careers (10)
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, March 10 -- The University of Copenhagen posted the following news: * * * Dark personality levels relate to people's job interests and chosen careers * When choosing an education or job, your choice is not only based on skills and opportunities. Your personality plays a notable role, too - and according to new research, certain traits can cause you to disregard certain types of work. This is also true for people who score high on the so-called Dark Factor of Personalit more PR

Distant past may expose companies to claims of hypocrisy (10)
ITHACA, New York, March 10 -- Cornell University posted the following news: * * * Distant past may expose companies to claims of hypocrisy * Companies risk being criticized as hypocritical when their words and deeds don't match - even if those discrepancies are decades apart, Cornell-led research finds. In a series of studies involving nearly 5,000 participants, real and fictional organizations were deemed hypocritical for inconsistencies separated by more than a half-century - if, for exa more PR

How AI is integrated into clinical workflow lowers medical liability perception (10)
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pennsylvania, March 10 -- Pennsylvania State University posted the following news: * * * How AI is integrated into clinical workflow lowers medical liability perception * HERSHEY, Pa. -Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing the field and practice of medicine, including legal liability and the perception of who is at fault when a patient experiences harm. "AI holds promise to improve the quality and safety of health care and to reduce errors and patient harm, but the risk more PR

Yale University: Helping Researchers 'BRIDGE' Language Barriers to Assess Caregiver-child Bonds (10)
NEW HAVEN, Connecticut, March 10 (TNSjou) -- Yale University issued the following news: * * * Helping researchers 'BRIDGE' language barriers to assess caregiver-child bonds A study led by a Yale researcher validates a new observational tool that helps researchers evaluate child-caregiver relationships in refugee populations. By Mike Cummings For decades, language barriers have hindered researchers' ability to assess child-caregiver relationships in refugee populations -- an important comp more PR