Like it or not, conflicts arise. Over time, we will all be faced with countless conflicts, some minor, some violently charged, others emotionally charged. Sometimes conflict can be beneficial. How we work to resolve conflicts for a greater good is vital to a positive future. Nipissing University is pleased to host a special lecture and workshop by Dr. Evan Hoffman on conflict resolution this weekend.
Dr. Steven Arnocky, associate professor of psychology,and his team will utilize the lab to help clarify the complex interplay between personality, immune function, hormones, and social context and how such factors interact to predict mating patterns and behavior, as well as competition, intimate partner violence and sexual violence.
Nipissing University’s psychology speaker series welcomes Dr. Michael Emond, of the department of psychology at Laurentian University, to campus for a lecture titled Stress-Eaters and Stress-Undereaters: Factors Affecting their Bi-Directional Feeding Response in Humans and in an Animal Model, on Monday, March 26, at 10 a.m. in room F-210.