Nobody likes the uneasy feeling of being watched — so can there be any workplace benefit to the all-seeing eye?
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Over the past two decades, the proportion of those who identify as bisexual increased from 1.2% to 4.5%.
For human-centered leadership to achieve a “tipping point,” people, productivity, and profits must be aligned.
The same technology behind the COVID-19 vaccines may enable the first damage-reversing heart attack cure.
Like ultra-hardy plants that thrive in harsh conditions, businesses that see crises as opportunities are likely to win in the long run.
From the bedside to the lab bench, here’s how laboratory testing works.
Kurzweil predicts that AI will combine with biotechnology to defeat degenerative diseases this decade. Then things will get really interesting.
The technology could yield “made-to-order resistance genes” to protect crops against pathogens and pests.
The integration of artificial intelligence into public health could have revolutionary implications for the global south—if only it can get online.
Sometimes you just want to hear, “I know what it’s like.”
“The primary way that people make friends is through institutions.”
When the UK bans the American Bully XL this year, it won’t rely on science to identify them.
Japan just opened to tourists for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic began, echoing the island country’s isolationist policies during the feudal era.
Sniffing out a deal.
There is one obstacle that reliably blocks innovative ideas: how we fund science.
We are tearing ourselves apart over gender issues, with the result that the problems of boys and men are left untreated.
COVID-19 and other microbes have shed light on disease spillover from animals to humans, but we can also spillback disease to wildlife.
The anxieties underpinning the Great Resignation were simmering for a long time. Here’s a solution.
Claims of a sudden infestation appear unfounded.
Two ICU physicians offer a new approach to stopping it.
Being a good leader requires emotional capital, which is one reason why many bosses are so bad at it.
There is no rule that will force Omicron or another COVID variant to become less deadly over time, but there is reason for hope.
In hospice care and hospitals, we prioritize those with more life to live over those who are terminally ill. What is that, if not prejudice?
A new railway will switch the Baltic region’s train gauge from Soviet to standard European — a megaproject with political, economic, and military dimensions.
For decades, cinemas have earned more from concessions than ticket sales. But can their current business model survive in the streaming age?
Dogs are seen as more likely to leap without looking – possibly a trait shared with their owners.
A panel of healthcare professionals much preferred responses that came from the chatbot in a recent study.
You can’t control external threats, but you can manage how you prepare and respond to the risk.
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It is generally ineffective, occasionally poisonous, and driving numerous species to the brink of extinction.
Telegrams were the “Twitter of the 1850s and 1860s” — and they elicited the exact same overblown fears as Twitter does today.