Discrimination Starts Even Before Grad School, Study Finds
A study found—overwhelmingly—that professors of all groups were more likely to respond to white men than women and black, Hispanic, Indian or Chinese students. Academics at private universities and in subjects that pay more on average were the most unresponsive.
April 25, 2014
- Nature
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The Bias for White Men
The study argues that the bias present in how faculty members respond to simple inquiries raises all kinds of questions about other forms of bias and whether academe is as welcoming to future graduate students as most academic leaders would say.
April 24, 2014
- Inside Higher Ed
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Tips for Finding a Great Mentor: Be White and Be Male
Researchers found that professors are less likely to mentor female and minority students.
April 23, 2014
- Slate
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Evidence of Racial, Gender Biases Found in Faculty Mentoring
Research found faculty in academic departments linked to more lucrative professions are more likely to discriminate against women and minorities than faculty in fields linked to less lucrative jobs.
April 22, 2014
- Morning Edition, NPR
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Why You'll Share This Article (or Not)
The research of Katherine Milkman and others offers one explanation for the proliferation of cat videos on BuzzFeed: content that invokes a strong emotional response typically does better.
April 19, 2014
- SFGate
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Need More Motivation? Try Behavioral Economics
Nearly a dozen websites claim to help you achieve your goals by utilizing the principles of behavioral economics, or how social, emotional and other factors influence our financial decisions.
January 31, 2014
- Runner’s World
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When Posting, Take Aristotle's Sage Advice
Pick something with ethos, pathos, or logos.That is, make it ethical, emotional, or logical.
January 25, 2014
- Philly.com
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The Six Things That Make Stories Go Viral Will Amaze, and Maybe Infuriate, You
Katherine and Jonah Berger found that two features predictably determined an article’s success: how positive its message was and how much it excited its reader.
January 21, 2014
- Elements, The New Yorker
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Need a Fresh Start? Here’s How to Begin
Temporal landmarks can motivate aspirational behavior.
January 6, 2014
- Knowledge@Wharton
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Why We Form New Year's Resolutions
Recent research helps explains why we pick this date for personal renovation, and how we can restart the clock if we slip up.
December 31, 2013
- The Huffington Post
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Why We Make Resolutions (and Why They Fail)
Katherine, Jason Riis, and Hengchen Dai found that fresh starts do push us to change our behavior.
December 30, 2013
- Elements, The New Yorker
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Beyond New Year’s Resolutions: Use Key Dates to Motivate Clients
Katherine’s research has expanded the available body of evidence on the so-called New Year’s Effect by showing that human beings actually make positive resolutions at any number of different points in their lives.
December 20, 2013
- Investment Advisor Magazine
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Three Ways to Keep Your Financial Resolutions in 2014
Figure out how to reward yourself when you do something difficult. Katherine discovered that people who can only read their favorite trashy novels at the gym are much more likely to get their exercise.
December 17, 2013
- The Wall Street Journal
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Indulge Your Way to Self-Discipline
Katherine decided to scientifically explore this idea of pairing less than pleasant new habits with little treats and gave the practice the name "temptation bundling."
November 22, 2013
- Inc.
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Using ‘The Hunger Games’ to Encourage Healthier Choices
Katherine decided to see if her experience restricting her more escapist reads to exercise time could be developed into an intervention capable of helping others with similar self-control struggles.
November 19, 2013
- Knowledge@Wharton
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Doesn't This Just Make You So Mad? (Now Go 'Like' It)
Katherine and Jonah Berger found uplifting stories were more viral than depressing ones. But "highly arousing content," like articles that induced anxiety or anger, did best of all.
October 25, 2013
- The Huffington Post
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Dieting in the Digital Age
Katherine has conducted several studies on what compels people to exercise and eat healthy. Her findings help explain the popularity of weight-loss apps.
October 4, 2013
- Knowledge@Wharton
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Make Good Decisions Faster
A simple Know-Think-Do framework can enable us to make all of our decisions—big and small; daily and defining—quicker without sacrificing quality.
July 24, 2013
- Strategic Thinking, Psychology Today
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‘Simpler’: Cass Sunstein on the Future of Government
In his new book, Simpler: The Future of Government, Cass Sunstein talks about how a more streamlined government can improve health, lengthen lives and save money. Katherine spoke with Sunstein about these changes and what the future holds.
July 1, 2013
- Knowledge@Wharton
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Why Social Networks Unwittingly Worsen Job Opportunities for Black Workers
A New York Times article notes that white Americans tend to get the edge in seeking certain jobs by accessing social networks that black Americans are not part of. Disturbing as this trend is, it stems from referrals that may seem innocuous to the people making them, say Katherine and Janice Bellace.
May 10, 2013
- Knowledge@Wharton
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