How to Parent Teens with Empathy
A 25-year study shows that teens who receive empathy from their parents give more empathy to their peers and, later, their own children
How to Parent Teens with Empathy
A 25-year study shows that teens who receive empathy from their parents give more empathy to their peers and, later, their own children
How Your Itch Can Make Others Scratch
Just watching someone scratch themselves on social media switches on the brain network that initiates the physical sensation of itch
Can Scientific Thinking Save the World?
A physicist, a philosopher and a psychologist are working together to bring better, smarter decision-making to the masses
Scientists Thought Only Humans Learn Complex Behaviors from Others. They Were Wrong
New studies in bees and chimps challenge the long-held assumption that only humans can learn from innovative peers
Why Some Couples Are Choosing a ‘Sleep Divorce’
Sleep experts break down why some couples are choosing a “sleep divorce,” or opting to sleep alone instead of sharing a bed
The Origin and Legacy of the Human Age
Whether we live a million more years or another week is up to us
Personality Tests Aren’t All the Same. Some Work Better Than Others
A popular personality test beats out astrology but trails far behind scientific measure of personal traits
Virtual Bar Scenes Are a New Tool to Study Why People Commit Crimes in the Heat of the Moment
Virtual-reality could assist researchers in decoding how emotions spur a decision to commit a crime
What Taylor Swift Conspiracies Reveal, According to Science
Yes, conspiracy narratives are everywhere. But it’s not as bad as you think
Is Bisexuality Genetic? It’s More Complex Than Some Studies Imply
The controversy over a recent paper on human bisexual behavior emphasizes how important it is not to overinterpret genetic studies of sexuality—and how easy it is to do so
Why Do Dogs Wag Their Tail?
Is your dog’s tail-wagging a side effect of domestication, or did humans select for it?
How Long Does It Really Take to Form a Habit?
There’s a myth that it takes 21 days to form a habit. Experts explain why it might take some people longer—or shorter