Professor & Director, Center for the Study of Human Nature. Reproductive ecology, parent-offspring conflict, sexual strategies (and cats). | All views my own.
@BarclaysBankUS Why does your answering system hang up on people when they ask to speak to a representative (after saying "O.K. A representative will be with you in just a moment"? I have a QUESTION that the automated system cannot answer. Do you employ any actual humans?
A heart-breaking moment saved in an SS picture of deportations of Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz II-Birkenau. It was taken 79 years ago, most likely in late May 1944.
A little child found a dandelion in the grass and is handing it or showing it to an older boy. All the people in this picture were waiting to be killed in gas chamber. They were murdered some time later.
Please RT this unique document.
GIVEAWAY! I had one of my A4 monkey prints in a frame and used too much/the wrong tape so the back is slightly damaged and I can't sell it. If you would like the print just follow me and retweet this tweet and I will pick a winner at random on Wednesday. I'll post to anywhere x
The paradox of ADHD:
Being so overwhelmed with my current commitments that I take on new, more interesting work, just to feel like I can accomplish _something_.
Thus doubling the amount of work I need to do…
First (re)tweet from the new @csuf Center for the Study of Human Nature! We hope you'll be hearing more from us! In the meantime, help out this student. 👇
A CSUF grad student in our Center for the Study of Human Nature (CSHN) is working on developing a scale to measure intrasexual competition. Sound interesting, right? If you have 20-30 minutes to take the survey she'd appreciate your help! survey link:
https://t.co/T6GKOfo0xk.
@OhNoSheTwitnt I suspect this may be why some people ask that question, ie wondering if they made the right decision. (Not that anyone else's experience can really tell you that, one way or the other).
One of the most profound things I read in my original journey to ADHD diagnosis was what Dr. Ned Hallowell calls “the cough drop sign” in the book, Driven To Distraction.
I’d never felt more seen before reading this quote.
It comes from one of Hallowell’s ADHD patients: