Hi all,
I post this without further comment (although I may be tittering like a little
schoolboy as I do so).
Best,
Jeff
=
Cooper, E. B., Fenigstein, A., Fauber, R. L. (2014). The Faking Orgasm Scale
for Women: Psychometric properties. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 43,
Hi
I wonder if anyone in Boston might be planning a study of the relationship
between home teams losing and depression or other psychological consequences?
Does it hurt more when it is on home ice/field/diamond? Or when the losing team
was expected to win? Or when the winning team was from
Actually, I was wondering if a sports team winning - home field vs. away, same
country vs. different country, etc - causes one to get a little cheeky?
I'm not much of a sports fan, but I suspect Montreal vs. Boston games have the
same psychological punch as say, Red Sox vs. Yankees or
p.s. for those of you into movies, check out 1939 in my last link - some
consider it the best year ever for Hollywood films. Also check out 1946 -
another banner movie year, these years bracket WWII. Even though there is
warfare in the background (Gone with the Wind, Best Years of Our Lives,
Otherwise known as the Meg Ryan scale (When Harry met Sally)?
On May 15, 2014, at 4:20 AM, Jeffry Ricker, Ph.D. wrote:
Hi all,
I post this without further comment (although I may be tittering like a
little schoolboy as I do so).
Best,
Jeff
=
Cooper, E. B.,
On May 15, 2014, at 7:32 AM, Paul Brandon wrote:
Otherwise known as the Meg Ryan scale (When Harry met Sally)?
OK, now that you've brought this up, here's a video of a flash mob at Katz's
Deli--the location for the iconic scene in When Harry Met Sally--recreating
that scene:
Bit of trivia about that scene (I will deplete all my TIPs posts) - director
Rob Reiner (Michael meathead Stivik from All in the Family, son of famed Carl
Reiner) acted out how he would do that scene in front of the cast, and he felt
especially weird because his mother was there watching. Why
Sorry, Michael, but do you have to have the black background?
Joann Jelly I think
From: michael sylvester [msylves...@copper.net]
Sent: Saturday, December 31, 2005 8:34 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Table of random numbers
cover Statistics in Intro?
Why or why not?
michael
'going beyond where no tipster has gone before
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