I have online relationships with people whom I've never met in person, and
that's beyond the many people here on TIPS that I've never met.
I've been friends, online mainly, with a group of about 5 currently, but about
15 at its peak. The group started in 1995 as a group of like-minded refugees
Last semester in my Social Psychology class we had a huge discussion about
catfishing and quite frankly I was initially dumbstruck - and I guess that
was my reaction to how could some of these folks be struck so dumb! :-)
Anyway, the thing that I find distressing is that this seems to me to be
one
And everybody knows that correct/incorrect is normally distributed as
well.
Cheers,
Karl L. Wuensch
-Original Message-
From: Mike Wiliams [mailto:jmicha5...@aol.com]
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2013 1:21 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re:[tips] my
How interesting! Also interesting is that, if you click on the mindhacks
link and follow the comments, when you click on a title mentioned: Remarks
on the Seat of the Faculty of Articulated Language,
Following an Observation of Aphemia (Loss of Speech)
*by Mr. Paul Broca (1861)*
*
*
it takes you to
The Mind Hacks blog
(http://mindhacks.com/2013/01/19/owner-of-brocas-area-identified/) today
reported on an article in the Journal of the History of the Neurosciences in
which details about the life of Broca's patient "Tan" are described (Domanki,
2013). The following is a passage from the jour
Chris Greenwrote:
>No, themain problem in cricket seems to be some of the
>bestteams and players in the world throwing games for money.
Hi, Chris:That rather overstates the matter. There have been very few known
cases ofplayers throwing big games for money. (The most notorious instance is
tha