I found reading Short Cuts Psychology to be an interesting read about psychology. For instance, the chapter on the Milgram study revealed that although Milgram's lab coat experiment was the most famous, his experiment like many psychologists in the 50s and 60s actually came out of World War II's aftermath and that he also did 30 less famous replications of the same experiment which had different results because the location changed, another student resisted, and the experimenter did not wear a lab coat. Then, another chapter that amazed me was the Yerkes-Dodson law. I learned that this law originally came in 1909 when two psychologists experimented on rats which revealed that a moderate stress level was most optimal because too little stress led to lethargy while too much stress can lead to anxiety and disorganization. After that, the graphic of Erickson's stages depicted a theater to depict the various stages of human development. For instance, the backstage and stage embodies infancy, childhood, and adolescence while the stands and the wings embody young adulthood, middle age, and old age. On groupthink, they used historical examples like Pearl Harbor and the Cubaan Missile Crisis to highlight that costly errors occured due to a desire for harmony. Lastly, on facial recognition, the chapter on propagnosia was epic as it highlighted that with propagnosia, the face of a man made up of vegetables is just vegetables because faces including their own are not recognized.