Mind & Behavior

Mind & Behavior

Study the science of how we think, feel, and act, with insights that help you better understand yourself and others.

What are they and, more importantly, how do you get rid of them?
Why should it be considered impolite to discuss something so important to our long-term well-being?
Million Stories
pill
If you want a medication to kick in faster, lean right.
Social isolation, back pain, and screen fatigue getting you down?
An abstract image representing how Alzheimer's disease changes the brain
Alzheimer’s disease is frightening, but the right combination of lifestyle choices can reduce your risk.
race
A clever neuroscience experiment shows that the "other-race effect" is likely due to a lack of experience and perceptual expertise rather than racism.
short-term thinking
Short-termism is both rooted in our most primal instincts and encouraged by runaway technological development. How can we fight it?
We're still using 800,000 gallons of embalming fluid a year, but burials are becoming far less common.
The phenomenon of “digital dementia” might not be real after all.
Research shows how temperature can be used to manipulate circadian rhythms.
When justice isn’t tempered by something such as mercy, forgiveness, or nonviolence, efforts to make society more equitable often backfire.
John Templeton Foundation
Reframing life in terms of death reveals some of the biggest philosophical problems with how we think about living systems.
You open an app and start scrolling, then suddenly it's an hour later. Sound familiar?
Blissful ignorance can be a rational choice.
One study estimated that 80% of people include “deviations” from the truth in their online profiles.
Nietzsche both wished he was as stupid as a cow so he wouldn’t have to contemplate existence, and pitied cows for being so stupid that they couldn’t contemplate existence.
The "Mind After Midnight" hypothesis aims to explain why night owls tend to suffer more negative health outcomes.