Attachment Research Says It's Okay To Throw Pine Cones At Your KidsI was at the park the other day throwing pinecones at my kids when a horrified mother asked, ...
Why Calvin's Dad Rocks At Explaining Science To ChildrenGary Larson tapped into the universal absurd. Charles Schulz helped us identify with the underdog...
A New Kind Of Reward Teaches Intrinsic MotivationI would like for my son, Leif, to play the violin. I’m a serious ex music geek and so in addition...







In the Iowa Gambling Task, a participant is presented with four, facedown decks of cards. He or she can flip over cards from any deck. Most cards earn a reward and some cards incur a penalty. Of the four decks, some are better (contain more reward-earning cards) than others.
If only you could ditch that traumatic memory, that craving, that debilitating fear of ventriloquist dummies (autonomatonophobia)! But these tendencies are so deeply ingrained that try as you might, you can't dig them out. Maybe you can drug them out.
Are you traumatized by terror flicks? Maybe more than you know. Scary movies actually create a light version of post-traumatic stress disorder. This is what causes bad dreams and irrational fears of kids riding Big Wheels in hotel hallways (and, perhaps more rationally, of Jack Nicholson peeking through axe holes into your bathroom). 
Want a real Halloween nightmare? Imagine filling your child's too-small bucket in the first three houses and going home with only a small slice of your kid's potential rake. But if you allow your little monster (or in my case, blue whale with pink and purple barnacles), to carry a big bag, you should be prepared to spend the hours and hours (and hours) needed to fill it.