emotional intelligence
What’s one of the most reliable indicators that a first date is going well? The answer might lie in how closely the couple is matching each other’s behavior and physiology. […]
Success can be measured in different ways. When it hinges entirely on our careers, we fall victim to a devastating addiction.
Arguments are a normal and often healthy part of a relationship. It all depends on picking the right kind of arguments, though.
Pain makes sense from an evolutionary perspective. What’s puzzling is why so many of us choose to seek out painful experiences.
Can we stop mass shootings? The first step is collecting data, and these authors have done just that.
You can love a romantic partner, but also a pet, a book, God, or the sound of someone’s voice. We need many more words for love.
If argumentation led to nothing, it would soon be thrown into the evolutionary dustbin.
In “The Secret Life of Secrets”, Michael Slepian explores how holding secrets affects our relationships, psychology, and well-being.
Science doesn’t fit neatly into ideology.
Grandmasters and drug dealers have one thing in common: They are many steps ahead of their rivals.
It’s time to put on your listening hat.
Willpower alone likely isn’t enough to replace a bad habit with a good one.
Are psychopaths cold-blooded murderers? Not usually.
Safety through technology is no bad thing—Nietzsche himself sought doctors and medicines throughout his life—but it can become pathological.
It may depend on whether you’re an “easily empathetically embarrassed” person.
People underestimate their opponent’s capacity to feel basic human sensations. We can short-circuit this impulse through moral reframing and perspective taking.
Research shows self-ratings of personality traits like diligence are generally more accurate than ratings from others.
When making any tough decision, the key is not to be overly exploratory or exploitative.
When was the last time you spent some quality time with yourself?
Successful romantic relationships require desire, but that desire doesn’t have to be sexual.
The results of a 2021 study suggest that the world’s most powerful psychedelic may be an underutilized peace-building tool.
Psychologist Adrian Furnham has termed this effect the male hubris, female humility problem.
Until robots understand jokes and sarcasm, artificial general intelligence will remain in the realm of science fiction.
Helplessness isn’t learned — it’s an instinctual response that can be overcome.
Dark personality traits include psychopathy, Machiavellianism, and narcissism. Is there room for empathy?
Nostalgia is a happy remembrance of the past, yet it also leaves us feeling sad. Perhaps ironically, it can serve as a painkiller.
“What am I missing?” is a question that journalist Mónica Guzmán thinks more people should start asking.
Lessons from child development research teach us how we learn to trust others.
The science makes it abundantly clear that couples with more self-expansion are better relationships.
Psychologists often view relationship power imbalances through three unique dynamics.