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Orion Jones
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By consciously taking specific actions — from seeking out role models to reevaluating how we think about failure — we can train our mind to behave more confidently.
Individuals who cheat in life quickly ignore the fact that their success is fraudulent, believing instead that their own abilities will carry them to even greater heights.
A San Francisco startup (what else?) is looking to make the home-buying process much simpler, leveraging data to find a fair market price as soon as a house is listed.
An Italian doctor is blazing a trail toward the first human head transplant, capitalizing on new medical techniques that can keep a patient alive during the operation.
Swedish researchers have established a link between excessive drinking and scoring poorly on intelligence exams.
Peanut allergies can be severe, but preventing the sensitivity may be as simple as exposing your infant to peanuts while they are young.
When vaccine skeptics are presented with statements about the benign nature of vaccines, they double down on their skepticism rather than softening their bias.
Fifteen college students are refusing to repay the private and public loans they received to attend Everest College, a for-profit institution that closed its doors.
The Utah Women and Leadership Project is helping the state overcome its ranking as one of the nation's serious underachievers when it comes to gender equality in the workplace.
The internet may be costing the economy dearly, and not just because we're distracted by Facebook when we should be doing our job.
While Brazil may not have the scientific muscle of American research institutions, its dietary guidelines are remarkably more consistent.
Men from gender egalitarian countries report they do an "unfair" amount of housework while their counterparts in less egalitarian countries complain less, even when asked to do more.
Cholesterol, coffee, and alcohol are among the winners in the government's new dietary advisory report, which is helping to create the nation's official 2015 dietary guidelines.
Some anxieties are indicators of healthy curiosity and strong moral fiber, while others are a source of severe stress.
If you think you have a productivity problem, you've probably got an overcommitment problem, says Elizabeth Saunders at the Harvard Business Review.
A long-lost, completed manuscript belonging to famous children's author Ted Geisel — better known as Dr. Seuss — is scheduled for release in July 2015.
Strong psychological reactions — call it the yuck factor — could prevent innovative ideas from maturing and therefore from reaching populations in need.
Female social entrepreneurs pay themselves an average of 29 percent less than their male colleagues, according to new research conducted at the London Business School.