
A Distorted Mind-Body Connection May Explain Common Mental Illnesses
Disruptions in interoception may underlie anxiety, eating disorders, and other mental health ailments

A Distorted Mind-Body Connection May Explain Common Mental Illnesses
Disruptions in interoception may underlie anxiety, eating disorders, and other mental health ailments

What Food Texture Teaches Us about Perception, Culture and Language
Kendra Pierre-Louis steps in as interim host and dives into the science behind why some foods—especially mayonnaise—can gross us out.


Why We Struggle to Say No—And How to Get Better at It
Why saying no is harder than it should be.

How Childhood Relationships Affect Your Adult Attachment Style, according to Large New Study
A large new study reveals how early relationships with parents and friends influence how we relate to those closest to us in adulthood

Why Some Apologies Feel Hollow—And Others Don’t
The words we choose when apologizing—especially longer, effortful ones—can signal sincerity and make our apologies feel more authentic.

The Slippery Slope of Ethical Collapse—And How Courage Can Reverse It
Your brain gets used to wrongdoing. It can also get used to doing good

Tipsy Bats and Perfect Pasta Win Ig Nobel Prizes for Weird Science Research
Winners of the annual Ig Nobel awards include the science of tipsy bats and the physics of cacio e pepe

Mondays Really Are More Stressful on the Brain and Body
The start of the workweek can be a biologically measurable stressor, with consequences for long-term health that can stretch into retirement

Small, Easy Acts of Joy Mean Big Gains in Happiness
A community science project finds that modest reminders to find joy in the day can have benefits that are on par with those of more ambitious well-being interventions

Why a Classic Psychology Theory about Vision Has Fallen Apart
The downfall of a long-standing theory in psychology raises a question: How much does the environment we’re raised in change how we literally see the world?

Cash Rewards Have Less Sway in Collectivistic Cultures
Money talks louder in some languages than others

Why ‘Use Your Words’ Can Be Good for Kids’ Health
Studies show that writing or expressing what we are feeling can help adults mentally and physically. Kids are no different