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Work songs can improve team coordination, study finds

Work songs, musical pieces designed to be performed or sung while working, have been widely documented across various cultures and in different historical periods. For instance, people in different nations have been known ...

A snapshot of food insecurity among immigrants

When you hear the term "food insecurity," what do you imagine? Do you equate it with poor dietary practices—in other words, eating badly? And do you believe the solution is getting people to better plan, shop for and prepare ...

Understanding Japan's complex religious landscape

On New Year's Day, millions of people in Japan visit Shinto shrines to pray for good fortune. In summer, many return to their hometowns to honor ancestors in Buddhist rituals. Families often maintain household altars, and ...

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Other
Human language shows deep safety bias, challenging 70-year scientific consensus
Social Sciences
A tale as old as time: Young, attractive femme fatale lore appears in nearly every culture
Social Sciences
In mafias, marriages are strategic tools, analysis suggests
Social Sciences
Love hormone enters battle mode, exposing rivalry and group lines in Amazon study
Social Sciences
Online echo chambers can arise even without algorithmic nudges or seeking like-minded people
Social Sciences
Federal grant terminations disproportionately impact minority scientists, study finds
Social Sciences
What working‑class boys need to succeed at school: Respect and open conversations
Social Sciences
Feeling underqualified can help drive performance or toxic behavior—depending on one psychological factor
Social Sciences
Over 60% of developing countries face overlapping socioeconomic and water security challenges, scientists warn
Social Sciences
'What do you want to be?' The spark that helps Indigenous people go to university
Archaeology
Why isolated human groups speak more diverse languages even as genetic diversity shrinks
Social Sciences
Red button or blue button? What a viral question tells us about game theory and the state of the world
Social Sciences
New algorithm spreads volunteers more fairly across nonprofits, with 8% broader reach
Social Sciences
Hollow‑Earth myths and Nazi UFOs on TikTok are bringing white supremacism into the mainstream
Social Sciences
Political breakups of friendships, relationships, and family ties
Social Sciences
How to talk to your kids about separating and managing the change
Social Sciences
Reducing social inequality: Why the scope of measures is crucial
Social Sciences
Safeguarding children in childcare: Teacher confidence key to addressing trauma
Social Sciences
Babies may share adults' sense of beauty, and it appears to sharpen with age
Social Sciences
Politicians are not ignoring you, statistical analysis suggests

Other news

Education
The cinema effect: Turning films into a gateway to science
Astronomy
Gravitational wave detectors can now 'autotune' signals to harmonize the heavens
Astronomy
Gravitational waves from colliding black holes may allow detection of dark matter
General Physics
80 years after the Trinity nuclear test, scientists identify new molecule-trapping crystal formed in the blast
General Physics
Largest-ever survey of physicists puts Standard Model of cosmology under scrutiny
Plants & Animals
Old newspapers track porpoise populations across the Baltic Sea
Optics & Photonics
How temperature changes light: New model could guide smarter LEDs, sensors and photonic devices
Bio & Medicine
Engineered exosomes reverse sleep deprivation brain damage in mice
Environment
How a single radioactive cloud caused Fukushima particle contamination
Plants & Animals
The shoal remembers: How signs of a collective memory shape a predator-prey arms race
Astronomy
Bright blazar reveals 433-day optical quasi-periodic oscillation across nine years
Molecular & Computational biology
Swapping molecular building blocks one by one reveals how receptors tell adrenaline from dopamine
Astronomy
TIME instrument unlocks faint signals from early galaxies across vast stretches of sky
Condensed Matter
Atoms vibrate on circular paths—with an unexpected twist
Plants & Animals
Human childbirth is not uniquely difficult among mammals
Plants & Animals
Meet the whistling mice that use inflatable air sacs to sing
Plants & Animals
Despotic primate societies rarely play as adults, analysis of 37 species reveals
Cell & Microbiology
Wine's leftovers could help wean chicken farms off antibiotics
Ecology
The fog is alive: Droplets host bacteria that clear toxins from our air
Ecology
Scientists dispute hypothesis that climate change will unleash massive agricultural pest populations

What celebrity worship says about self-worth

In today's celebrity‑ and influencer‑driven culture, psychologists are increasingly interested in why people form strong emotional connections with famous figures, finding that celebrity admiration is closely linked to how ...

The rich are more likely to use AI, exposing a new digital divide

The widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI)—particularly in "hidden" everyday applications—is creating a new and distinct form of digital inequality. This is the warning of communication researcher Professor Sai ...

From smoking to stigma: How screen stories influence health

What people see on screen can shape what they do off it. When actors such as James Dean and Marlon Brando lit cigarettes in 1950s rebel films, smoking came to signify cool, defiance and desire for an entire generation.

Location cues on social media can change how people judge posts

The old maxim "location, location, location" may be as important in the social media landscape as it is in real estate. When a social media post about a user's personal experiences, feelings or beliefs includes geographic ...

Early institutional care lowers life expectancy, study suggests

Infants who grew up in early child care institutions in the 1950s have a much shorter life expectancy than the general population, according to a long-term study of individuals in Zurich. For the first time, the study provides ...