Americans encounter incivility more than twice a day on average (2.4 times) according to a new study.
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Some researchers are concerned that current methods are not the least painful and least stressful options.
Guest post by Jill Janes “Susie, you are to report to the principal’s office at once.” Those words strike terror directly into the heart of most elementary students. They are […]
China is in full gears to becoming a cultural superpower, and its 400 million micro-bloggershave a huge stake in creating the future society.
Like the Raspberry Pi, Columbia University professor Shree Nayar’s device helps kids learn the basics of hardware design, and he also plans to donate some to underprivileged communities.
Someone who would suffer a great deal is deemed to be immature.
For other subjects, an app that allows teachers to create, analyze and grade assignments online, and provides students with instant feedback on their work, may seem like no big deal. For music theory, it’s a big deal.
A trap created by Rutgers University scientists that resembles an overturned plastic dog food bowl caught many more bedbugs than a similar, shallower trap. The addition of special chemical lures made them even more effective.
I first practiced Bikram Yoga over a decade ago in SoHo. The heat punched through me like a lead fist. Although a few years experienced in Vinyasa, the thick atmosphere […]
Renowned psychologist and emotion-guru Paul Ekman describes how introducing conscious awareness to facial expressions can help one override and control their emotions.
The next wave of terrorist attacks may be fueled by explosives surgically implanted inside the bodies of suicide bombers.
Reports of hearing meteors as they passed overheard were largely dismissed until about 20 years ago, when a scientist proved that very low-frequency radio waves could be picked up by certain objects, such as wire-rimmed glasses.
To coincide with the Discovery Channel’s annual “Shark Week” series, Nova Southeastern University has launched a Web site that allows visitors to follow specially-tagged sharks as they swim around the world.
Find out how as we chat LIVE with Robert Greene at 1:30 PM Eastern on 8/7/2013
An engineer has developed a process that will produce ammonia more cleanly and possibly in enough amounts to provide an alternative energy source.
The video below gives us a microscopic view of an event that is happening with great frequency this month: a mosquito is eating human for dinner.
The Sun’s magnetic field will flip in three to four months, an event that will have ripple effects across the Solar System, that’s detectable by even the far-away Voyager probes at the doorstep of interstellar space.
If consumers thought about the economics of Restaurant Week, they might prefer to stay away.
While the vast majority of mainstream press attention (and capital) focuses on the 1st through 3rdVerticals, some of the real paradigm shifting technologies and approaches may be in the 4th and 5th Verticals. […]
In our material, measurable world, infinity is never a real, physical quantity; it is only an abstraction.
A new study warns that the rock that landed near Chelyabinsk in February may be part of a larger group of asteroid remnants, all with orbits that could potentially lead them to Earth.
The government announced the closing of the country’s two public zoos in July, with many of their residents moving to private centers. However, a separate law passed in December means those centers don’t have a lot of vacancies.
An Australian man’s newly-launched campaign is the latest effort to address the phenomenon of people paying more attention to their phone than to other people around them.
Lee Smolin posits the idea that new universes are born from parent universes through the mechanism of black holes.
Responding to U.S. strikes and personnel evacuations in Yemen, Big Think Waq al-Waq blogger Gregory Johnsen asks a simple question: why?
Galileo must have developed “a new theory of optics as revolutionary as the device itself.” This theory he kept secret.
As of today (Aug. 6), the site’s Art Store offers over 40,000 works of original and limited-edition art from more than 150 galleries and dealers. Prices range from hundreds of dollars to millions of dollars.
If the Nobel committee has the guts, it has been argued, it could deliver “a smackdown to the security state.”
The NOAA visualization below depicts a giant plume of dust moving off the coast of Africa.
Or, more specifically, stomach complaints: nEmesis monitors diners’ Twitter accounts for certain words that might indicate a potential food poisoning issue. Tests showed its findings closely matched those of health inspectors.