Experts suggest ways to correct the habits that keep us from resting well.
Psychology Today Magazine
May 2019
Biracial people enjoy some possible benefits—good health, attractiveness, and a more open mind, to start. But these come with the challenges of navigating racial identity.
Technology keeps hatching new ways to avoid the emotional labor of breaking up. That only makes things worse.
Some of psychology's most popular ideas, it turns out, might not be true. A diverse set of scientists is taking steps to make the field's claims more likely to stand the test of time.
Mathematician and pianist Eugenia Cheng takes your math phobia down a notch.
Echoists insist that they not be treated as special. Their partners too often comply.
The ingredient that gives turmeric its dazzle may perk up the brain by many routes.
A vegetable-based diet seeds cognitive staying power.
Ghada Wali subverts stereotypes through design.
Social groups are all guided by rules—some more strongly than others.
Conforming is widely denigrated. Why do we do it anyway?
Our moral choices are heavily influenced by social norms, research finds—even when those norms are known to be meaningless.
Neuroscientist Susan Hockfield details innovative technologies coming down the pike.
The cost of misjudging others’ emotions.