So excited to have my whole lab at @affectscience.bsky.social this year! Come see what the IDEA Lab is up to!
@lisastarr
Clinical psychological scientist at U of Rochester with interests in depression, life stress, interpersonal factors, daily processes, clinical affective science. Mom of 2. Probably tired right now. Opinions my own
So excited to have my whole lab at @affectscience.bsky.social this year! Come see what the IDEA Lab is up to!
People are obsessed with the idea that social media has destroyed a generation and yet the public menace of unregulated AI mental health support goes ignored people.com/man-fell-in-...
Here I once again, watching Love is Blind, rooting for people to make horrible life choices
The NYT published a lovely memorial to my colleague Ed Deci. Anyone who knew Ed can tell you he was one-of-a kind; he truly lead a self-determined life.
www.nytimes.com/2026/02/26/s...
I used to use em dashes all the time in my writing and now I'm afraid to, lest I be appear bot-like. Now my writing is rife with semicolons and parentheses.
I understand why chatbot cheating happens but every time I read about it I want to gently remind everyone that the point of schoolwork is not for the submission to exist. Teachers are not just greedy for more essays or solved equations. The point is to do the work WITH YOUR OWN BRAIN, FOR LEARNING.
Edward Deci, a pioneering psychologist who transformed how human motivation is understood through his work on self-determination theory and intrinsic rewards, passed away this month at age 83.
He spent his entire career at URochester, and was widely known as a generous mentor, advisor, and friend.
This is a moral stain on our nation.
Clearly the clinical psychology research community is centered around me
Can we pass a law against naming federal property for living people??? I know the founders never imagined a world where a sitting president would condition policy on his narcissistic needs for self-validation but here we are.
(all this said, I made the decision to decline all reviews during my sabbatical and also decline bc of bandwidth reasons sometimes, so no judgement. it's just too much!)
It seems like there's been a "learn to say no to things" movement (punchcards where if you say no 10x you get ice cream, etc.). We also need to teach people that there are limits to that and if you are going to participate in the system you have to help maintain it, even if the incentives suck.
It is also an ethical value that we need to collectively instill & embrace. People (esp younger gen) are getting better at declining excessive service demands, which is a good thing. But people at all career levels who don't review regularly but still submit to peer review journals are freeloaders.
I absolutely think there's training value. And, when I'm on search committees, I'm totally put off when ass't prof candidates only have a couple journals on their ad hoc review list, and conversely impressed when they have a huge number. But, it's hard to list number of REVIEWS, only # of JOURNALS.
Reviews (unfortunately) donβt help oneβs cv or visibility much, in proportion to the considerable effort involved. That is what needs to changeβ add incentives (recognition for hard work/insights, or financial). Publons doesnβt cut it.
When I was a postdoc I was already getting too many reviews to handle. And, when I ask my students to co-review, 95% of the time they say no because of βlow bandwidth.β I donβt think junior scholars need or appreciate doing reviews more than senior ones, nor should the burden get shifted to them.
π¨ Requesting help:
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Please signal boost?
I was a sensitive kid. I loved cats. I had OCD, undiagnosed.
When I was 9, a fraternity brother tortured a cat to death in my hometown. The details even now are beyond imagination. archive.is/xdmUL
I was traumatized for years from reading the news story.
The torturer? Now the head of the NRA.
When we coauthored a PB paper, the AE was more thorough and careful than almost any Iβve ever worked with, and the manuscript was longer than my dissertation. If I had done what he did, it would have taken weeks. I quickly resolved to never, ever, ever join PBβs Ed board.
Dear lord, is a requirement for peer reviewing conducting the systematic review yourself?
I know some people love to fantasize that there's a crusade against everything they like so they can wallow in sweet, sweet self-righteousness. But protein???
We are excited to announce our partnership with @inclivio.com's software for #SAS2026.
Weβre counting down to the conference with a series of posts.
Enter a drawing for 3 EMA study licenses by liking (1 point) and reposting (3 points)!
#SAS #AffectiveScience #EMA #EmotionDynamics
We keep saying it because it keeps being true. He'll leave such a body count. And it won't always be immediate, clearly discernible effects: these policies will impact people for generations & through both proximal and distal, insidious downstream consequences.
Iβm so sorry about your patient loss. Thatβs a terrible thing to endure but especially as a trainee.
This is a monstrous, deadly plan. It also seems like a political loser for RFK. People of all walks of life take antidepressants and will feel personally attacked.
Hmm. So apparently this quaint little comment got me blocked?
Iβm not sure Iβve ever gotten blocked before. Who knew my first time would by pointing out the Common Rule definition of human subjects research!
Itβs good to debate better norms for AI research. And lots of us are deeply concerned about Big Tech AI models scraping our scholarly work. Hence viral thread.
But, public claims of βharmβ or misconduct are serious and can themselves cause reputational damage, especially for grad students.
The thing is, even if you don't like it, analyzing your paper likely doesn't meet the formal definition of human subjects research so consent is not required. And IRBs define "harm" narrowly and don't include things like being personally offended or mildly stressed out. (1/2)
Still sure how you were "harmed" exactly or even how you were involved if all they just ran your paper through an algorithm.
I guess I have a high bar before I publicly launch a crusade against a grad student's research, but OK.
How are they analyzing you? It seems like they analyzing a paper you wrote. Of course, they need consent for asking you questions about your reactions to it, but they are seeking that.
I can understand not wanting to participate if you don't want to help further the development of these kinds of models on principle. But from an IRB perspective, I don't think your consent is required for them to use your papers.