Elephants Call Each Other by Name Across the Savanna
Female elephants address one another with individualized rumbles
Marta Zaraska is a freelance writer based in France, is author of Growing Young: How Friendship, Optimism and Kindness Can Help You Live to 100 (Penguin Random House, 2020). She wrote "Shrinking Animals" in the June 2018 issue.
Elephants Call Each Other by Name Across the Savanna
Female elephants address one another with individualized rumbles
'Hydrogen Fever’ Erupts after Discoveries of Large Deposits of the Clean Gas
Large stores of natural hydrogen have turned up in Albania, France and Mali
You Can Literally Sniff Out Other People’s Inner Feelings
Scents are not only important in our relationship to food and the natural world. They also play a role in how we communicate with people we know
Food Can Be Literally Addictive, New Evidence Suggests
Highly processed foods resemble drugs of misuse in a number of disturbing ways
Moving in Sync Creates Surprising Social Bonds among People
Dancing, rowing and even finger tapping in unison unleash powerful forces in the brain that drive good feelings
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Expressing humor is a key part of being human
People with This Phobia Suffer from a Fear of Being Laughed at
Gelotophobics can’t stand to hear chuckles because they think they’re the butt of the joke
The Warmth of Friendship, the Chill of Betrayal
Thanks to some evolutionary hardwiring in the brain and body, our physical and psychological temperatures are linked
Veggies with Vision: Do Plants See the World around Them?
The concept of a “seeing plant” fell by the wayside in the early 20th century—only to reemerge in the past few years
Eating These Foods Makes Men More Attractive to Women
Women prefer the scent of men who eat diets rich in certain foods—including garlic!
Hear the Violet, Taste the Velvet
Research is unwinding the physiological basis of synesthesia, finding links to migraine, autism and other conditions that suggest a role for the immune system
So, You Want to Be a Synesthete?
Several “artificial” approaches exist but most evidence suggests that training cannot capture a synesthete’s experience
The Next Zika
Four insect–and tick-borne viruses that you may not have heard about are now worrying researchers
Meet the Meat Paradox
We love animals, yet most of us also eat them. Research is revealing the cognitive tricks we use to resolve the omnivore’s dilemma
The Genes of Left and Right
Our political attitudes may be written in our DNA
With Age Comes Happiness: Here's Why
New research is unraveling how and why the elderly “choose happiness”