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New study reveals the depth of children's nuclear anxiety

As geopolitical tensions rise globally, a new study published in Critical Studies on Security warns that the shadow of the "mushroom cloud" is weighing heavily on the next generation. The research paper, titled "Mushrooms, ...

Should emojis be used in workplace communications?

When people interact in person, subtle signals like facial expressions, body language, and tone of voice play a crucial role in communicating intent and meaning, whereas written communications lack these nonverbal cues and ...

Swipe right? Dating apps linked to body image pressures

Bumble, Tinder or Hinge—they're the fast-paced, image-driven dating platforms millions rely on to find everything from love to a late-night fling. But new Adelaide University research suggests they may also be undermining ...

Why we're skeptical of the emotions we see on our screens

If you've poured your heart out on social media about a political issue, it might have felt cathartic—but likely was not persuasive, Cornell research finds. Americans are skeptical of emotional comments they see in their ...

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Social Sciences
Do you see faces in the clouds? Researchers examine pareidolia
Social Sciences
Natural disasters trigger 69% surge in public protests across Latin America, research finds
Mathematics
Analysis finds geometric thinking may come from wandering, not a human-only math module
Mathematics
Alignment during conversations is highly situation-dependent, study finds
Archaeology
How an eye physician who translated classical Greek medicine into Arabic helped form Western medical thought
Social Sciences
By age 7, most children quickly spot individuals' social biases toward social groups, study finds
Social Sciences
Do narcissists ruin relationships over time? A six-year study suggests a more complex pattern
Social Sciences
Humor helps older adults navigate aging, research suggests
Social Sciences
Rudeness may be rewarded—as a response to rudeness
Social Sciences
AI's fluency in other languages hides a Western worldview that can mislead users
Social Sciences
Leadership emotions are judged differently for men and women
Social Sciences
Study suggests people are losing 338 spoken words every year and have been for at least 15 years
Social Sciences
Can you trust a finding? A new project maps which studies replicate
Social Sciences
Are relationship surveys measuring the wrong thing? How one 'Q-factor' shapes most answers
Social Sciences
Study finds some dark web users share traits with those involved in crime
Social Sciences
Women are being shut out of workplaces because of a hidden time gap, new research shows
Social Sciences
Is true empathy possible between humans and AI?
Social Sciences
Social media enables mapping of public perceptions of redlining across the U.S.
Social Sciences
Going from serving the nation to serving a prison sentence
Social Sciences
Book explores small talk and big silence in evangelical communities

Other news

Plants & Animals
African swine fever: A novel model assesses transmission between domestic pigs and wild boar
Cell & Microbiology
Unlocking the hidden metabolism of algae to advance the promise of renewable fuels and sustainable biomass
Biochemistry
Nickel catalyst enables precision mirror-image assembly for key drug scaffolds
Ecology
Simple vineyard growing practice impacts soil microbiome deep below surface
Optics & Photonics
Megawatt structured light arrives with 3,070 optical vortices in one array
Biotechnology
AI diffusion models tailor drug molecules to custom-fit protein targets, speeding drug development and evaluation
Plants & Animals
Chimpanzee empire falls apart in rare instance of division and deadly violence
Nanomaterials
Carbon nanotube fiber sensors achieve record measurement error below 0.1%
Evolution
Mammal ancestors laid eggs—and this 250-million-year-old fossil proves it
Earth Sciences
Hidden ocean feedback loop could accelerate climate change
Analytical Chemistry
Plant-inspired water membrane filters CO₂ with constant selectivity and adjustable permeance
Cell & Microbiology
Liquid-like histone H1 'glues' nucleosomes, reshaping how DNA compacts
Archaeology
No more giants, no more heavy handaxes: Why early humans downsized their stone tools
Analytical Chemistry
Hydroxyl radicals in UV-exposed water reveal surprising reaction pathway
Plants & Animals
How an internal plant 'thermostat' guides root growth in unpredictable temperatures
Molecular & Computational biology
A smarter way to build vaccines: Scientists harness AI to target emerging alphaviruses
Cell & Microbiology
Decoy molecules trick soil bacteria into attacking persistent pollutants without genetic engineering
Plants & Animals
Oxygen sensing helps explain why amphibians regenerate limbs but mammals cannot
Earth Sciences
Deadly heat thresholds have already being crossed in six recent heat waves, study shows
Ecology
Wildlife trade increases pathogen transmission: What 40 years of data say about spillover

Workplace nature breaks may cut stress, study finds

With 76% of adults now reporting stress levels that impede daily function, a new Cornell study points to a low-cost intervention hiding in plain sight: nature. The study, published in March 2026 in ScienceDirect, found that ...

How to stop panic buying: Research finds COVID lesson

Panic buying doesn't just respond to shortages—it creates them. And according to a University of the Sunshine Coast behavioral scientist, the lessons learned during COVID-19 remain critical for preventing future buying frenzies.