Medical psychologist Catherine Monk explains how prenatal mental care benefits both mothers and babies.
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In the land of the double-blind, impartiality is king.
The perfectly accessible, perfectly knowable Universe of classical physics is gone forever, no matter what interpretation you choose.
Queen Calafia seems like she could have sprung from the pages of a modern fantasy novel.
Archaeologist Bernard Frischer spent decades uploading the ruins of the Eternal City to the cloud. Here’s what it looks like.
For better teamwork, take a lesson from research into soccer fans who put aside their tribalism.
Four key components to guide the creation of emotional intelligence training for leaders.
Sight helps you see a room, but interoception lets you sense it from inside your own body.
There could be variables beyond the ones we’ve identified and know how to measure. But they can’t get rid of quantum weirdness.
Mary Toft staged an elaborate hoax, but the pain was real.
Fear of being scammed can lead us to make decisions that go against our values and goals — both as individuals and as a society.
Einstein always loses in the quantum realm.
Jotform CEO Aytekin Tank outlines a strategy for balancing collaboration with healthy competition.
Physicists just can’t leave an incomplete theory alone; they try to repair it. When nature is kind, it can lead to a major breakthrough.
Math can explain why your laces spontaneously come untied — and how to stop it.
The authors call it “wildly theoretical” — but let’s take a look, anyway.
Finland reveals that happiness is more about mindset than umbrella drinks and sun-warmed beaches.
Find it easier to sort out your friends’ problems than your own? This paradox is for you.
If you think everyone around you is terrible, the joke may be on you.
Many atheists think of themselves as intellectually gifted individuals, guiding humanity on the path of reason. Scientific data shows otherwise.
Autocrats like Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin fear democracy, yet go to great lengths to present themselves as democratic leaders.
Mental health awareness is more widespread than ever. Some professionals think it may have gone overboard — especially on TikTok.
Like Dua Lipa, he had to create new rules.
Asteroid collisions aren’t always bad.
Research shows that spending more time on social media is associated with body image issues in boys and young men.
The base rate fallacy may help to explain low reproducibility in various fields of science.
The former Nintendo president has become synonymous with the backlash against layoffs — because, like a great leader, he focused on lifting people.
Moral panics about the content of children’s cartoons and other forms of entertainment have a long history.
The whole isn’t greater than the sum of its parts; that’s a flaw in our thinking. Non-reductionism requires magic, not merely science.