September 2013 | gradPSYCH
Vol. 11 No. 3
On the Cover: Backbreaking work
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Backbreaking work
Sitting too much is associated with a host of ills, including cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes and other serious health problems.
MONEY MATTERS
Online financial apps can make electronic spending 'real' — and help graduate students cut back.
Features
The internship process is being revamped to ensure quality and help more students get the slots they need.
Early career and seasoned psychologists answer graduate students' top questions.
Psychologist Melissa Menzer works to ensure that the National Endowment for the Arts funds top-notch research on how the arts can enhance our lives.
Psychology is a broad field with an array of research topics, so studies often overlap.
Here's a look at the key ethical and practice issues that are still unfolding in this new realm of care.
Meet the newly elected leaders of APAGS — the world's largest organization for psychology graduate students.
A Elizabeth Munsterberg Koppitz Fellowship sought to identify efficient methods to reduce subthreshold lead levels among children in low-income families.
The Latest
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Watch out for faux journals and fake conferences
These publishers now disseminate 5 percent to 10 percent of all open-access articles.
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Students lie about their sex lives to match gender expectations, study suggests
For example, men who weren't hooked up to a fake lie detector reported having more sexual partners than those who were.
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New APAGS journal picks its editor
<em>Translational Issues in Psychological Science</em> will be led by Mary Beth Kenkel, PhD

