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      • When information comes into our memory system (from sensory input), it needs to be changed into a form that the system can cope with so that it can be stored. Think of this as similar to changing your money into a different currency when you travel from one country to another.
  1. This blog, my workshops, and "Emotional Currency" is about bringing more of a balance to our thinking about money by including our personal emotional and psychological...

  2. Dec 19, 2016 · This is the currency that makes a relationship thrive. The three primary types of attention we typically share with one another are words, deeds and touch. Let me elaborate on each:

  3. Sep 10, 2021 · Social currency, as previously defined in the literature, may be divided into six different aspects that impact the behavior of the users on social media sites, that is, conversation, advocacy, information, affiliation, utility, and identity (Lobschat et al., 2013; Mishra and Singh, 2021 ).

    • Xiaoxiao Gong, Zuoliang Ye, Binjie Liu, Shengxian Yu, Yufei Yan
    • 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.672505
    • 2021
    • Front Psychol. 2021; 12: 672505.
  4. Aug 16, 2021 · HBR Staff/Getty Images. Summary. If money brings up a lot of emotions for you, you’re not alone. Financial expert Ramit Sethi explains our relationship with money is just as personal and...

    • Currency
    • Relevance
    • Authority
    • Accuracy
    • Purpose
    • Concluding Thoughts on Critical Reading

    An article on mental illness published in Psychology Today30 years ago, even if written by a top expert, may not reflect recent findings or our current conceptualization of mental illness. Compared to physics or chemistry, psychology is still a very young science and some of our most basic assumptions in the field have been challenged by new scient...

    As you begin reading an article, keep in mind the reason you selected to read it. Sometimes the written material does not address the question you thought it would; perhaps the author failed to answer the question, the title was intentionally misleading, or you misunderstood what the author intended to explain. Perhaps you are not the intended audi...

    If the information you are reading comes from an individual’s personal experience, make sure the author is experienced enough in the field and has used a systematic approach to analyzing his or her experiences. Why? Because all of us, including doctors, are prone to many biases. (One such biasis explained in the video below). Greater trust in the a...

    Psychology is—or inspires to be—an empirical science, so major psychological claims need to be verified by scientific experiments. If what you are reading is said to come from research, check the references and click the links. Psychology researchers often write in a manner that shows their respect for truth. For instance, they suggest that a varia...

    The last element of the CRAAP test is the purpose of the article. One may write for various purposes: Informing the reader of an occurrence, explaining how something happened, entertaining, selling, persuading, and other motivations. Also look for ulterior motives, conflicts of interest, and hidden agendas. Even a highly objective researcher may so...

    To evaluate the usefulness and reliability of the information you are reading, ask a lot of questions, like: What does this mean? Why? How does the author know? Who said that? When? Based on what evidence? Better yet, have a list of the CRAAP Test questions (Figure 1) and get to work. Do not forget to click the relevant links or look up references....

    • Arash Emamzadeh
  5. Sep 24, 2014 · Emotional Currency, the Underlying Exchange. Our capacity to learn an emotional language and our ability to relate primarily to ourselves, as well as to others, will dictate whether or not we can learn to process, understand and indeed move on from any of our past emotionally laden experiences. By Jenny Florence, Contributor.

  6. We explore the psychological meanings of money that parallel its economic functions. We explore money's ability to ascribe value, give autonomy, and provide security for the future, and we show how each of these functions may play out differently in different cultural milieus.

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