$15 Amazon Gift Card for Participating in a Psychology Study
If you are an adult and interested in participating in psychological research, you may be eligible for a study that examines the effects of recalling personally relevant emotional information on emotionally evocative image memory. As a participant in the study, you will be asked to come into the lab to complete questionnaires and complete a task in the lab that involves looking at images.
Your time is important to us, and you will receive a $15 Amazon gift card for this study that will take under 1.5 hours.
If interested, please visit our website at https://tempt.uark.edu/memory-emotion/ to complete the eligibility questionnaire. For additional information, email TEMPTuark@gmail.com, or call 479-345-8099 and ask about the Emotional Image study.
Contacts
Hannah Henderson,
PSYC
512-650-9592,
hmh029@uark.edu
Headlines
Campus Invited to Celebrate University's 'SOOIEET' Success Today
Students, faculty and staff are invited to join Chancellor Charles Robinson between 2-3 p.m., today on the Arkansas Union Mall for a 'sooieet' celebration.
Tyson Explores Future Career in Automotive Engineering in German Internship at Audi
BSME and German student Luke Tyson is part of the International Engineering Program at the U of A, in which students spend their fourth year abroad taking courses at the Technical University of Darmstadt and completing an internship.
M-ATOMS Showcases Progress at Second Annual Conference
The Manipulation of Atomic Ordering for Manufacturing Semiconductors center hosted its second annual conference in late August, with 10 institutions participating.
Exhibition Features Work From Interior Architecture and Design National Award Winners
The exhibition will be on display from Sept. 16 through Oct. 18 on the first floor of Vol Walker Hall, and will include work from the Interior Architecture and Design National Award Winners and others.
International Studies Fall 2024 Speaker Series: Peter Thilly
The International and Global Studies Program will host Peter Thilly, professor of history at the University of Mississippi, on Sept. 27 in CORD 324 for his talk, "Drug Money and Modernization in Coastal China."