Latest News for: robin dunbar

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Halloween director John Carpenter on why we should be watching horror films in lockdown

Metro UK 26 Feb 2021
‘The argument here is that actually, maybe the emotional wringing you get from tragedy triggers the endorphin system,’ Robin Dunbar, a co-author of the study, told The Guardian ... Revealing that previous research has similarly found that laughing and dancing together can heighten pain tolerance through an endorphin boost, Dunbar added.
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John Schelling

The Crescent News 25 Feb 2021
DefianceJohn M ... John is survived by his loving wife of 25 years, Janet Polasek-Schelling of Defiance; his brother-in-law, Joseph Polasek of Defiance; sister-in-law, Mary (Ray) Collins, Robins, Iowa; his special cousin, Donald (Deborah) Dunbar of Defiance; special family friend, Darlene Schimoller of Angola, Ind.; and many cousins ... Michael E ... .
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Friends by Robin Dunbar review – how important are your pals?

The Guardian 21 Feb 2021
The psychologist’s fascinating study of friendship finds that the quality of our relationships determines our health, happiness and chance of a long life You may not have heard of Robin Dunbar.
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Lost touch: how a year without hugs affects our mental health

The Observer 24 Jan 2021
Touch has a huge impact on our psychological and physical wellbeing, says Prof Robin Dunbar, an evolutionary psychologist at the University of Oxford ... As adults, Dunbar’s research has found, we have a core set of, on average, five friends who we can call on as a shoulder to cry on.
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The week ahead in Parliament

BBC News 08 Jan 2021
It's a pervasively pandemic-focused week, as the Commons returns from its extended (although interrupted) Christmas break ... Here's my rundown of the week ahead. It comes with the usual health warning ... "Events, dear boy..." ... The witness list is led by Robin Dunbar, professor of evolutionary psychology at the University of Oxford ... .
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Christmas tributes for loved ones lost to Covid

BBC News 24 Dec 2020
Christmas is different for everyone this year but especially for the thousands of UK families who have lost relatives to Covid-19 ... Dean, Cardiff ... Joanne lived near her mum in Dunbar, to the east of Edinburgh. She and her two daughters have bought a wreath and wicker robin to put on Josie's grave - and a new ornament for their Christmas tree ... .
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Hawaiian shirts and gravy: Christmas tributes for loved ones lost to Covid

BBC News 24 Dec 2020
Christmas is different for everyone this year but especially for the thousands of UK families who have lost relatives to Covid-19 ... Dean, Cardiff ... Joanne lived near her mum in Dunbar, to the east of Edinburgh. She and her two daughters have bought a wreath and wicker robin to put on Josie's grave - and a new ornament for their Christmas tree ... .
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Facebook Is a Doomsday Machine

The Atlantic 15 Dec 2020
Link Copied ... Read ... This idea comes from the anthropologist Robin Dunbar, who argued that 148 is the maximum number of stable social connections a person can maintain ... In other words, if the Dunbar number for running a company or maintaining a cohesive social life is 150 people; the magic number for a functional social platform is maybe 20,000 people ... .
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How Covid-19 is breaking up friendships

New Statesman 09 Dec 2020
The Oxford anthropologist, Robin Dunbar, argued in a paper published by the Royal Society in August that as the pandemic drags on, our friendship circles may be permanently reshaped. Dunbar is known for the “Dunbar number”, his contention that humans’ brains limit the number of friends and acquaintances we can maintain relationships with to 150 ... .
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The small, significant thing I miss so much in this pandemic

CNN 04 Dec 2020
(CNN)Among the many life-altering effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, there are some that clearly weigh heaviest of all. SE Cupp ... Then there are the smaller, everyday privations ... Read More ... I miss office gossip ... Evolutionary psychologist Robin Dunbar suggests that the bonding among early primates by way of grooming has evolved into today's "chit-chat." ... .
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Book review: A new chapter in the evolution of Yuval Noah Harari’s ‘Sapiens’

Taipei Times 11 Nov 2020
The historian and author on adapting his phenomenal bestseller into graphic format, why science needs storytellers, and how COVID-19 fuels threats to humanity ... Sapiens ... Some, such as the Oxford anthropologist Robin Dunbar, a specialist in primate behavior, are real figures who have shaped Harari’s thinking; but most are fictional ... (Spoiler ... Sapiens ... UK.
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Irish and UK research helps to unravel secrets behind 'A Song of Ice and Fire' TV adaptation

The Times of India 10 Nov 2020
Martin ... Even the most predominant characters - those who tell the story - average out to have only 150 others to keep track of ... R ... "This study offers convincing evidence that good writers work very carefully within the psychological limits of the reader," Fellow researcher Professor Robin Dunbar, from the University of Oxford, said. .
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A new chapter in the evolution of Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens

The Observer 08 Nov 2020
“I vetoed it,” he says over the phone from his home outside Tel Aviv. “I try to keep myself mostly outside my books.” ... So it’s curious to see the 44-year-old appearing in Sapiens ... Some, such as the Oxford anthropologist Robin Dunbar, a specialist in primate behaviour, are real figures who have shaped Harari’s thinking; but most are fictional ... (Spoiler.
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