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More rhythm, less blues: Program boosts class behavior

From flash mobs to line-dancing to the Nutbush, experiencing rhythm and movement in a group context is known to boost mental and physical health in people of all ages. Now a University of the Sunshine Coast study published ...

Q&A: How research aims to improve bad housing data

Nicholas J. Marantz, associate professor of urban planning and public policy at UC Irvine, is investigating how effectively current data sources track changes in residential housing stock. His aim is to understand how policy ...

Kinship interlocks: How the rich stay rich

How do some wealthy families remain in the upper class for many generations, while other rich families do not? That is the question author Shay O'Brien (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) tackles in the sociological study ...

Can we trust the science shaping our lives?

Improved methods for social and behavioral sciences research could help enhance public trust in science, says a new study that investigated the robustness of data analysis to understand whether it reliably stood the test ...

Too hot to handle? How heat is reshaping US population shifts

As extreme heat intensifies across the United States, it's widely assumed that rising temperatures will push people to pack up and leave. But new research from Florida Atlantic University challenges that narrative, showing ...

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Economics & Business
Employment data shows the early signs of AI job disruption are already here
Economics & Business
Elite MBAs still influence who reaches the top of corporate America, study shows
Social Sciences
New study finds 12- to 17-year-olds willing to engage in democracy, but feel anxious, unheard, distrustful of politics
Social Sciences
Feeling lonely? Try a walk in the great outdoors
Economics & Business
From Salford to Shanghai: Cities taking control of housing
Political science
How industry and geography play a role in support for radical right parties
Social Sciences
Why couples may be wrong to dread talking about money
Social Sciences
Improving everyday journeys for women and girls
Social Sciences
What do sushi, climbing and smoking have in common? How we talk about risk
Archaeology
Unearthed mega-structure hints at communal rule in Romania 6,000 years ago
Archaeology
First physical evidence of Peruvian Hairless Dogs at Wari site uncovered in Peru
Archaeology
Next-generation CT scanner reveal new details inside 2,300-year-old Egyptian mummy remains
Archaeology
4,000-year-old clay tablets inscribed with magical spells… and beer tabs
Archaeology
Shakespeare's 'missing' London house mapped with new discovery
Social Sciences
Autonomy key to happiness, study finds
Archaeology
Ancient charcoal sheds new light on how early humans fueled their lives
Education
Study confirms that guessing before learning improves memory in language learning
Archaeology
Bolivian mummy rewrites scarlet fever's past, suggesting killer bacterium circulated centuries before colonization
Social Sciences
Back-to-basics approach can match or outperform AI in language analysis
Other
Referee decisions in soccer frequently overturned following VAR-assisted review: No external influences found

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Plants & Animals
Raven personalities shape survival as human pressure grows at the Dead Sea
Plants & Animals
How poison frogs built a chemical weapons system one evolutionary step at a time
Condensed Matter
Surprising link between metallicity and superconductivity uncovered in twisted trilayer graphene
Quantum Physics
Universal quantum protocol extracts maximum work without knowing a system's state in advance
Optics & Photonics
Flat optics move toward market with 300-per-second metalens production
Ecology
PFAS detected in dolphin milk may pass from mothers to calves
Earth Sciences
Earth's tectonic elevator hauls ancient buried microbes back to the seafloor to revive and spread
Earth Sciences
Taiwan landslide's hidden motion comes into focus as fiber optics track deep slip
Environment
Wildfires used to 'go to sleep' at night. Climate change is turning them into prime burning hours
Optics & Photonics
Bright quantum light emission achieved at room temperature in 2D semiconductors
Cell & Microbiology
Antioxidant glutathione discovered to play a key role in proper protein folding
Earth Sciences
Machine learning detects more than 60,000 earthquakes during 2025 Santorini sequence
Ecology
Warmer streams may be draining river food webs by sending more carbon into the air
Bio & Medicine
Nanobody repairs misfolded CFTR inside cells, boosting function in cystic fibrosis
Biotechnology
Two bacteria join forces to turn chemical signals into electricity, opening up low-cost sensing options
Earth Sciences
The Colorado River disappeared from the geological record for 5 million years: Scientists now know where it went
Astronomy
A student-led experiment sets new limits in the search for axions
Soft Matter
Quantum-informed AI improves long-term turbulence forecasts while using far less memory
Plants & Animals
DNA cracks nutmeg's hidden past, revealing a South Moluccas origin and a prehuman journey north
Earth Sciences
Indonesia's fire crisis comes into focus as high-resolution satellite maps expose 5.62 million hectares affected

How HR can help public companies succeed long after the IPO

A new study from a University of Iowa researcher, published in Personnel Psychology, provides management lessons that can help newly public businesses survive long-term. For starters, have an HR exec.

New study calls for a 'pedagogy of joy' in higher education

In a new paper published in the British Journal of Sociology of Education, University of Sheffield researchers argue that the modern university experience is increasingly defined by stifling targets and material pressures.