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Happy New Year From Clinically Psyched

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Clinically Psyched would like to wish all of our readers a Happy New Year and a prosperous 2009.

This year, we are aiming to make some significant change to our website. We are hoping to have a new website design up and running within the next few months and add more features to this website in order to make it more user friendly. We are considering including an education centre with some relevant psychology lectures, and ask users to contact us if they wish to use our site in order to post educational materials. Additionally, we are looking into adding podcasts and videos to the website.

We will also be looking to add new content writers to our staff within the next few months. If you believe you would be an asset to this website, we would love to hear from you and see examples of your work. While this is not an official call for new staff at this point in time, we would be more than happy to recieve resumes from content writers. If you believe you could be of benefit to our team, please email us with your current resume and links to field specific writing.

Happy New Year all. We hope that we can continue to grow over the next year and thank all of our readers for their support over the past four years.

The CP Team.

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March 2010
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  • Prevention program helps teens override a gene linked to risky behavior
    A family-based prevention program designed to help adolescents avoid substance use and other risky behavior proved especially effective for a group of young teens with a genetic risk factor contributing toward such behavior, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Georgia.
  • Psychologist Killed In Iraq
    The battle ended for Hutchison on Sunday. He died in Basra, Iraq, of wounds from a roadside bomb in Al Farr. He is the oldest U.S. service member to die in Iraq or Afghanistan.
  • fMRI Brain Scans Making Real Progress For Multiple Fields Of Research
    Scientists have used brain scanning technology to watch the formation of emotions ranging from love and lust to anger and disgust. Last month researchers even suggested they could use a variant of fMRI, called diffusion tensor imaging, to show how people with high IQs think faster.
  • Atypical Patients And Antidepressants
    One reason antidepressant medication treatments do not work as well in real life as they do in clinical studies could be the limited type of study participants selected, researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have found.
  • OCD, Anxiety And Daydreams
    From idyllic countryside to gross acts of violence, why an innocent daydream can sometimes turn nasty and what it means .