The ability to say no is crucial for mental health and self-confidence.
Psychology Today Magazine
September 2017
Can science help bring back female desire?
How much do these once-wolves know about us—and themselves?
Is big data the future of psychiatry?
Our future depends on how we handle artificial intelligence.
Doubts in Tova Mirvis's faith led her to leave more than just her religion.
The bugs in your gut have hidden ways of helping you master your emotions.
The snap judgments we make based on people's online photographs may predict how we act toward them in person.
Umami? Kokumi? The search for new tastes goes way beyond gastronomy.
It's easy to be a hero to someone who is clueless about managing her own life. It's harder to be a hero in your own home.
Avoid looking too perfect to those you hope to aid.
Colorful leaders inspire, but they may have unexpected limits.
"The Influential Mind" introduces less-than-intuitive tactics for changing beliefs and behaviors.
Fear is powerful, but so is the feeling it often sparks in others: compassion.
What happens when you get a degree in chemistry from Harvard, but want to be a novelist?
Gender influences how fathers interact with toddlers.
It might be more than a bad mood.
The negative impact of secrets may stem from the way they lurk in our minds.
How much sway does sex have over what we keep secret?
Laughter may support relationships by triggering the release of feel-good chemicals.
Infants can become physically attuned to their mothers’ stress levels.