Dec 31, 2023 // Quotes and features research by Daniel Feiler in an article examining how regret can be a powerful tool for self-understanding and change. “We have to remember there is no perfect path,” says Feiler, whose research shows that people sometimes idealize choices they didn’t make, believing that the road they didn’t take w
View at The Washington Post
Jul 12, 2023 // A feature story about research by Dan Feiler and Adam Klienbaum examining the role of extraversion in shaping social networks.
View at YourTango
May 24, 2022 // Features research from Dan Feiler, and coauthor Johannes Müller-Trede, which found that observing forgone alternatives to a decision—as opposed to them being uncertain or unknown—may reduce feelings of regret associated with choices.
View at PsyPost
Mar 29, 2022 // Features research by Dan Feiler and coauthor Johannes Müller-Trede examining the nature of regret and what may cause individuals to feel regret.
View at Psychology Today
Oct 31, 2017 // Daniel Feiler discusses his recent study exploring the intersection of uncertainty, choice, and expectation. Feiler says understanding your implicit bias regarding the choices you make doesn’t mean you should avoid choosing the best possible alternative, but merely manage your expectations.
View at Forbes
Sep 30, 2017 // Daniel Feiler discusses his forthcoming paper exploring how choice affects expectations. Feiler says people have a tendency to be overly optimistic about the choices they make and that being more realistic could lead to greater satisfaction.
View at Forbes
Mar 26, 2017 // Daniel Feiler, assistant professor of business administration, and Eesha Sharma, assistant professor of business administration, are named two of Poets and Quants' 2017 Best 40 Under 40 Professors.
View at Poets and Quants
Apr 15, 2015 // Continued coverage of a recent study led by Daniel Feiler and Adam Kleinbaum which found that extroverts are over-represented in real-world networks, and that the effect is more pronounced in the networks of socially outgoing people.
View at Yahoo! Health
Apr 14, 2015 // Continued coverage of a recent study led by Daniel Feiler, and Adam Kleinbaum which found that extroverts are over-represented in real-world networks, and that the effect is more pronounced in the networks of socially outgoing people.
View at Fast Company
Apr 08, 2015 // Continued coverage of the study by Daniel Feiler, assistant professor of business administration, and Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, published in Psychological Science.
View at Sydney Morning Herald
Apr 08, 2015 // Continued coverage of the recent study by Daniel Feiler, assistant professor of business administration, and Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, which found that most social networks are overpopulated with extroverts.
View at New York Magazine
Apr 07, 2015 // Cites research co-authored by Daniel Feiler in an article about the friendship paradox—a perceived notion that individuals tend to have more extroverts in their friend group than introverts.
View at Mic.
Apr 07, 2015 // Quotes Daniel Feiler in an article about his study that found extraverts were more likely to make friends with many other extraverts, while introverts were more likely to have other introverts in their smaller social networks.
View at Huffington Post Canada
Apr 07, 2015 // Highlights a study co-conducted by Daniel Feiler that found that extroverts and introverts perceive the world in different ways—with introverts being far more perceptive and in touch with reality.
View at Elite Daily
Apr 06, 2015 // Daniel Feiler, assistant professor of business administration, and Adam Kleinbaum, associate professor of business administration, took the well-known friendship paradox, which states that, statistically speaking, your friends probably have more friends than you do, and extended it to real-world social dynamics.
View at The Telegraph