If you can resist the urge to smash the china, feeling jealous can actually bring couples closer together.
Psychology Today Magazine
November 2016
What really makes people feel like intellectual fakes? And how can they overcome it?
Richard Stallman’s quest to save us from a web of spyware—and from ourselves.
Scientists bet that memory loss can be not only delayed but, at least in its early stages, stopped in its tracks.
Words evolve, ideologies creep. Is that “problematic”?
Nearly four years ago, Paul Salopek began his trek—on foot.
Seventeen years after being raped, a criminologist finds a surprising path to closure.
There are eight B vitamins, and they’re all instrumental to the brain.
There are few creatures on Earth that seem as alien as the octopus, starting with its strangely evolved brain.
What compels people to give to others online.
Lublin founded Crisis Text Line to provide free, anonymous mental health support using text messaging.
Meet five thinkers whose oeuvres span two worlds.
To salvage neglected pursuits, try these tactics.
Being less than accurate about what others think of you may have an upside.
The hunt is on for genetic clues to children's future achievement.
Compliments are oxygen for a relationship.
The cast-off ideas of yesterday could inform the next breakthrough.
The amount of happiness a dollar buys depends on how you use it.