Family Home And Social Sciences
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Women “camouflaging” autistic traits suffer severe mental health challenges, BYU study finds
A new study shows a strong correlation between how much women with autistic traits camouflage—hide or compensate for autistic qualities to fit in—and the severity of their mental health concerns.
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Father-friendly workplaces make finer families
Employers are in a unique situation where they can either support father involvement in the family, or they can be a barrier.
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Is video game addiction real?
Long-term BYU study looks at the effect of video game play and the trajectories of addiction
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Is too much screen time for kids making it harder to talk in person?
Children are constantly surrounded by screens – whether it’s watching TV, gaming on a computer or scrolling on a phone. Parents and scholars alike are worried that growing screen exposure is destroying the rising generation’s face-to-face social skills and leaving children unable to converse and interact with others.
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Physical distancing, social distancing and what they're doing to our health
BYU professor Julianne Holt-Lunstad is a world-renowned expert on the current loneliness epidemic and is lending her voice to address some crucial health issues in the age of coronavirus
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BYU researchers: Parents should be more intentional about financial conversations with kids
Family discussion about money can enhance children’s financial knowledge and reduce future financial instability.
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Stronger for having served
More than one million American men and women are veterans of the War on Terror—that is, veterans who served in the U.S. Armed Forces after September 2001. Contrary to popular belief, most veterans who return home do not experience PTSD or similar conditions.
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Does time spent on social media impact mental health? New BYU study shows screen time isn’t the problem.
New research led by Sarah Coyne, a professor of family life at Brigham Young University, found that the amount of time spent on social media is not directly increasing anxiety or depression in teenagers.
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Increasing workplace diversity: It’s simpler than you think
In the United States, nearly 90 percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are white males, while less than four percent of CEOs are African American or Hispanic. With these numbers in mind, companies are constantly trying different strategies to increase diversity in the workplace.
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How valuable is financial aid to low-income students?
In the 2015-16 academic year, students received $28 billion in Federal Pell Grants. The monetary assistance helps students who display exceptional financial need pay for their tuition. But more than the dollar amount is how that aid helps college students shape the rest of their lives.
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New study: Thousands of lives could be saved by reducing air pollution levels
The estimate of lives that could be saved by further reduction of air pollution levels is more than thirty thousand, which is similar to the number of deaths from car accidents each year.
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How you feel about your home is more important than the size
Although home environments affect the way many feel which, in turn, has the potential to influence family relationships, researchers at BYU recently found that how individuals perceive the space (too crowded or too spread out) in their homes has more of an effect on family functioning than actual characteristics, such as the size of the house or number of bedrooms.
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Helicopter parenting: Control vs. support makes all the difference
BYU researchers identify three different kinds of helicopter parents
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Immigrant students raise performance across the board
A group of researchers from BYU and the University of Albany recently tested the claim that immigrant students drain resources from native-born students -- but they found just the opposite to be true.
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Study: Couples thrive in relationship quality and stability when both partners are involved in financial processes
Researchers examine feminism in finance
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Study: Serious dating can create serious challenges for teens
Considering a host of social pressures and stresses that adolescents experience, the addition of a relationship to the equation can have a negative impact, according to a study from BYU professor of family life Adam Rogers.
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BYU marriage and family therapy program honored nationally for research
The BYU marriage and family therapy program was recently named the No. 1 program of its kind for research productivity.
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Does political party trump ideology?
It’s the political scientist’s often-asked chicken and egg: does a person’s political party or policy attitudes come first?
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