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Social status beats money

https://www.mpg.de/14297019/social-status-beats-money

People are more honest when talking about topics involving high-status knowledge. A new study in behavioral economics shows that this is true even if they have a financial incentive to lie. As expertise about increasingly complex technologies becomes more difficult to verify, questions of trust are getting more and more important.
However, the experiment revealed: Only 32 percent correct recommendations were sent

Coin toss influences penalty shootout

https://www.mpg.de/17126111/coin-toss-influences-penalty-shootouts

In the knockout phase of the European Championship, some matches were decided in a penalty shoot-out. There has been much discussion about whether the sequence in which the teams take their penalties has an influence on the outcome of the match. A new study has now tried answering this question. As Matthias Sutter from the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Collective Goods in Bonn together with three colleagues from Düsseldorf found out, it is not the sequence, but the result of the coin toss before the penalty shootout, that matters.
only 56 percent of all captains opted to go first, while the remaining 44 percent sent

A software system identifies personality traits from eye movements.

https://www.mpg.de/12185266/eyes-movement-personality-traits

A software system uses artificial intelligence to draw conclusions about a person’s personality traits from their eye movements. For this, a team of researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Informatics led by A. Bulling has been using machine learning to train the system to evaluate human visual behaviour.
Humans can read the social signals sent by the eyes as a matter of course and without

Taming light – White laser pulses with precisely tailored waveform enable the control of electrons in the microcosm

https://www.mpg.de/4415021/taming_light

An expedition through the fast-paced microscopic world of atoms reveals electrons that spin around at enormous speeds and have gigantic forces are acting on them. Monitoring the ultrafast motion of these electrons requires ultrashort flashes of light. However, in order to control them, the structure of these light flashes, or light pulses, needs to be tamed as well. This type of control over light pulses has now, for the first time, been achieved by a team of physicists lead by Eleftherios Goulielmakis and Ferenc Krausz of the Laboratory of Attosecond Physics at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics (MPQ) and the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich in Garching, along with collaborators from the Center of Free-Electron Laser Science (DESY Hamburg) and the King Saud University (Saudi Arabia).
The physicists have created these light pulses and sent them into a newly developed

Made in Germany and big in Japan

https://www.mpg.de/20717860/news-from-mpi?c=12642524

The innermost pixel vertex detector (PXD) has now been installed in the Belle II experiment. The instrument is located in the immediate vicinity of the interaction point where electrons and positrons collide. This produces B mesons. The decays of these particles could explain why there is matter in the universe but hardly any antimatter. The PXD is based on a special technology that allows the particle decays to be precisely traced.
Oscar Bolz/DESY After the successful test phase, the newly assembled detector was sent