
A Playbook for Science Denial, ‘Scientific Phallocracy’ in the Animal Kingdom, and More
Recommendations from the editors of Scientific American

Recommendations from the editors of Scientific American


Nothing is real about the colors you see here

Highly assertive, confident individuals may foster a selfish culture that hurts productivity

Our minds tend to create new stuff by piling on to what’s already there, a practice that narrows our thinking

The right combination of variables is needed to achieve a blazing success—one explanation for why there was never a “Kinksmania”

People working together often scheme to put profits ahead of telling the truth. New research points to ways to stop this behavior

The emotion AI industry, courts and child educators are unknowingly relying on a misunderstanding of Darwin’s ideas

Studies suggest that appreciating beauty in the everyday may be just as powerful as a sense of overarching purpose

When networking, women and people in racial and ethnic minority groups can benefit from calling out their identity

Children are worried by Russia’s attack and need explanations about what is going on, a family counselor says

The nation’s largest association of psychologists said its members should do more to treat the dangerous health effects of rising temperatures

High levels of it have put people at risk of emotional problems

New research underscores that almost everyone’s personality blends “more often seen in men” and “more often seen in women” characteristics

People in a study handily solved puzzles while juggling an unrelated mental task by relying on spontaneous insight, not analytic thinking

A focus on the traumatic origins of an often stigmatized psychiatric diagnosis is inspiring new treatments

People seeking to radicalize others are using ads to push conspiracy theories and extremist views

You can change your behavior in lasting ways by changing how you frame your situation, explains behavioral scientist Ayelet Fishbach in her new book

The one-year anniversary of the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol is raising concerns about falsehoods that increase the risk of repeat events

The pandemic is teaching us key lessons about how people respond to crisis and misinformation, and it is spurring changes in the way scientists study public health questions
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