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Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress on Thursday that a year after the terrorist attacks, the U.S. economy appears to have done a good job of withstanding a series of severe blows, although the depressing effects still linger. Greenspan cautioned that the effects from such problems as the terrorist attacks and the huge drop in stock pr
stanley mugs ices were having a lingering impact on growth as the country tries to mount a sustained recovery from last year s recession. The U.S. economy has confronted very significant challenges over the past year mdash; major declines in equity markets, a sharp retrenchment in investment spending and the tragic ter
stanley bottles rorist attacks of last September, Greenspan told the House Budget Committee. To date, the economy appears to have withstood this set of blows well, although the depressing effects still linger, Greenspan said. In his prepared testimony, reports CBS News Correspondent Bob Fuss, Greenspan also told Congress there are still dangers ahead, and one of them is the federal budget, which has gone from surplus to deep deficit. As spending, especially on defense, balloons, the Federal Reserve chairman is urging Congress to try to keep some budget controls in place. Wednesday, the Federal Reserve issued a
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Oxytocin is often referred to as the trust hormone, a claim that was reinforced by a 2005 study in which participants became more trusting after it was administered via a nasal spray. Trouble is, few studies have been able to reproduce this result, prompting at least one neuroscientist to suggest it high-time we stop believing the hype.
https://gizmodo/10-reasons-why-oxytocin-is-the-most-amaz stanley termosky ing-molecule-in-5925206 The study in question, Oxytocin increases trust in humans, was conducted by Michael Kosfeld and published in Nature. He wrote: Here we show that intranasal administration of oxytocin, a neuropeptide that plays a key role in social attachment and affiliation in non-human mammals, causes a substantial increase in trust among humans, thereby greatly increasing the benefits from social interactions. As part of the experiment, Kosfeld had his participants play the Trust Game 鈥?a standard two-player game in wh
stanley termosar ich one player takes on the role of an Investor who is administered the oxytocin [OT] and the other takes on the role of the Trustee. This experiment produced data showing a correlation 鈥?albeit a slight one 鈥?between OT and trust, or more accurately, the willingness of an investor to conduct transfers. But as neuroscientist Mike McCullough points
stanley cup out in the inaugural post of his new blog, Social Science Evolving, follow-up studies have largely failed to reproduce these results. McCullough directs the Evolution