When and how should we open up to loved ones?
Psychology Today Magazine
September 2014
Is death just a hallucination?
No matter how big or small our personal egos, we're all narcissists when it comes to teams, tribes, and the human species.
Thirty years after 1984, we're all being watched, nearly all day, in ways we could never have imagined.
Technology can make finding new love a lot harder.
Ed Hamell turns a life of mayhem and tragedy into humorous music
How to get intimacy back and help a depressed spouse
The art of making abstract ideas concrete
New findings on fear and anxiety.
Millennials take their Ivy League degrees to the farm
Chirlane McCray reflects a rapidly changing America.
The origin of your relationship may have greater significance than you think.
A Q&A with OkCupid co-founder Christian Rudder
Why do injustices snowball? Research explains.
We share something funny with our primate relatives.
Beautiful is not necessarily better
Make helping even more of a win-win.
Cognitive science allows clearer writing
Fear keeps us alive in a dangerous world, but too much can make it hard to function.
The work of Walter Mischel reveals hard truths about self control—and its limits.