
Arber Tasimi
@arbertasimi
Assistant Professor of Psychology at Emory. I study babies and kids; my mom prefers that I just have them. 🇦🇱
ID: 899122061133656064
http://www.arbertasimi.com 20-08-2017 04:12:59
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🚨RT! The Social & Cognitive Origins group at Johns Hopkins University (social-cognitive-origins.com), directed by Dr. Christopher Krupenye, is recruiting a full-time research assistant or lab manager to begin Summer 2025. The position has a one-year minimum, w/ the possibility of extension. 1/







We are hiring a post-bacc research coordinator to help on projects exploring EEG and MRI measures of neuroplasticity supporting sensory and language learning in the first 2 years of life! Please repost to help us spread the word! more info here: plasticityinneurodevelopmentlab.com/join-us

🌟 Exciting news! 🌟 This summer, one of my dreams is coming true: I’ll be joining Emory Goizueta as an Assistant Professor of Organization & Management! I'm so grateful for the wonderful mentors, collaborators, and friends who helped me get here



I'm thrilled to announce that I'll be joining Rob Glosner as an Assistant Professor of Human-Computer Interaction (with a courtesy joint appointment in Social and Decision Sciences) in 2026!


Philippe Rochat and I are looking to hire a joint full-time research specialist to coordinate multiple research projects across our labs. This position is ideal for someone considering graduate school in developmental psychology. staff-emory.icims.com/jobs/145788/jo… Please spread the word!


The Emotion Health and Psychophysiology lab at Yale University is hiring a lab manager. Applicants should have a BA/BS in psychology or related field. Please send CV/resume and cover letter to [email protected]


Big congrats to Alex Shaw (The University of Chicago UChicago Psychology) on the 2025 Faculty Award for Excellence in PhD Teaching and Mentoring! We are proud to have him as part of the Roman Family Center for Decision Research community. 👏👏👏 Read more: news.uchicago.edu/story/uchicago…



Laypeople often learn about science from expert explanations & those explanations often contain JARGON. Does jargon make explanations better or worse? In a paper out today in Nature Human Behaviour, Francisco Correia da Cruz and I find that jargon can support illusions of understanding...