Loneliness is a complex problem of epidemic proportions, affecting millions from all walks of life.
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Psychology Today Magazine
March 2018
Tapping into an existing cognitive ability will help us survive the ever-changing environment.
There is no requirement for assessing a president’s mental fitness to govern. Should that change?
People who suffer dissociative fugue can't remember who they are. Some even start life over with new identities.
The cultural factors that contribute to sexual harassment are under scrutiny as never before.
Fitness for duty evaluations are standard for those whose jobs affect public safety.
For eight years, Renee Sullivan identified as transgender. Then it got more complicated.
Michael Ryan has spent decades studying a tiny, bumpy frog that offers clues to universal laws of romance.
Magician Nate Staniforth discusses how to find wonder in magic again.
In neuronutrition, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
A variant of the superspice makes gains as a way to stave off cognitive decline.
It's difficult to make a choice when everything is a possibility.
Our ideas about others' lives are prone to exaggeration.
A new book explores the origins of our greetings.
Conscious experience seems to arise from various parts of the brain, a neuroscientist explains.
Some teens may use "digital self-harm" to test how others see them.
Some looming hazards may be especially blurred by drinking.
Age may color the perception of narcissism in today's youth.
Your hometown climate may influence your personality.
A key to success may be the fit between your personality and your job.