Baby boomer parents and their boomerang kids.
Psychology Today Magazine
September 2003
Why do we loathe lumpy food and pick at our plates?
Indie darling Chloe Sevigny on acting, fashion, and therapy.
Life with a borderline partner.
Who calls the shots when it comes to you and your favorite brand?
Culture influences the palate.
Controlling our emotions the Buddhist way.
When parents steer daughters toward high-achieving mates.
The "permaparent" phenomenon of returning twenty-somethings.
Breast cancer is not just a woman's disease.
Attractive people are more likely to be familiar, even as a stranger.
Americans work more than employees in any other industrialized country.
Researchers identify protein important for learning and memory.
Depression may be costing U.S. businesses $44 billion a year.
Anxious workers turn to cardiac drugs to relieve stress.
Many kids are well schooled in societal prejudice.
Using irregularities in eye movement to diagnose psychological disorders.
Family dining encourages healthy eating in kids.
Seniors misjudge their own driving ability.
The brain differences between the timid and outgoing.
The size of the ring and a man's commitment.
Creating landscape art with the human body.
The human body as landscape art.
People are more likely to divulge information to a computer.
The brain registers social pain much like physical injury.
Only one third of Americans with a mental health problem get care.
Power, not pocketbook, brings job happiness.
How long-term relationships can protect your heart.
Tai Chi builds immunity to nerve disorders in the elderly.
Some religious denominations are richer.
Females develop better managerial styles than men.