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7 votes
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Why it took thirteen years to engineer the Taco Bell Crunchwrap
8 votes -
The curious side effects of medical transparency
10 votes -
The Big Five are word vectors
4 votes -
What to do if your inner voice is cruel. The golden rule of self-compassion: Treat yourself with the same kindness you treat others.
9 votes -
How to offer help when you don’t know what to say
7 votes -
Charles Silverstein, who helped declassify homosexuality as mental illness, dies at 87
8 votes -
Longitudinal study of kindergarteners suggests spanking is harmful for children’s social competence
7 votes -
988 Lifeline sees boost in use and funding in first months
5 votes -
Listening to podcasts may help satisfy our psychological need for social connection, study finds
12 votes -
How to deal with holiday stress, Danish-style
4 votes -
Teletubbies: The bizarre kids' TV show that swept the world
6 votes -
10,000 brains in a basement: The dark and mysterious origins of Denmark’s psychiatric brain collection
6 votes -
AI’s new frontier: Connecting grieving loved ones with the deceased
7 votes -
Bed Habits - One insomniac’s descent into the world of sleep research to understand what screens before bed are doing to our brains
4 votes -
Talk to me about: Impulse control
What is your personal impulse control like? Do you have good impulse control overall? Do you have an addictive personality? Where does it fail? Anything you’re particularly proud or ashamed of?
14 votes -
10,000 brains in a basement – the dark and mysterious origins of Denmark's psychiatric brain collection
8 votes -
Why you are lonely and how to make friends
5 votes -
The armchair psychologist who ticked off YouTube
1 vote -
A brief look at Jordan Peterson
8 votes -
How to take things less personally and avoid mind reading
7 votes -
Adam Curtis documentaries
7 votes -
Five ways to help someone with depression
7 votes -
Reading to improve language skills? Focus on fiction rather than non-fiction
6 votes -
The medical power of hypnosis
3 votes -
The hyperbolic geometry of DMT experiences
7 votes -
Caring for the vulnerable opens gateways to our richest, deepest brain states
6 votes -
Casino design and why there are no ninety degree turns in most casinos
4 votes -
Bullying can make children's lives a misery and cause lifelong health problems – but scientists are discovering powerful ways to fight it
17 votes -
The twitches that spread on social media
10 votes -
Textual healing: The novel world of bibliotherapy
3 votes -
Energy, and how to get it - All of us know people who have more energy than we do, but the science of the phenomenon is just coming into view
10 votes -
The irony of the Dunning Kruger effect
3 votes -
Taming the Beast: The Inner Battle for Control
3 votes -
Why insects are more sensitive than they seem
8 votes -
Is there any point in arguing with people?
12 votes -
Searching for Mr. X - For eight years, a man without a memory lived among strangers at a hospital in Mississippi. But was recovering his identity the happy ending he was looking for?
4 votes -
How the modern world makes us mentally ill – Dr. Jonathan Haidt
6 votes -
An obvious bug in Dungeon Crawl: Stone Soup that players failed to recognize for two weeks, and what it demonstrates about "cognitive decoupling"
20 votes -
The psychological advantage of unfalsifiability: The appeal of untestable religious and political ideologies
5 votes -
The history of humiliation points to the future of human dignity
5 votes -
Envy
15 votes -
Was Wilhelm Wundt a "Nazi"?: Volkerpsychologie, Racism and Anti-Semitism by Adrian Brock
1 vote -
The transatlantic element: Psychoanalysis, exile, circulation of ideas and institutionalization between Spain and Argentina
5 votes -
Have you ever met a psychopath?
For the past month, I have been reading "The Wisdom of Psychopaths" by Kevin Dutton which delves into traits, behaviors, and motivations behind psychopaths. This book isn't just about serial...
For the past month, I have been reading "The Wisdom of Psychopaths" by Kevin Dutton which delves into traits, behaviors, and motivations behind psychopaths. This book isn't just about serial killers but rather also the "successful" functional psychopaths such as stockbrokers, politicians, and business executives. You can read an excerpt from the book here if interested. A few interesting takeaways that I have had from the book so far are the innate cues that some people have on picking up on psychopathic cues. This is like speaking to someone and getting the heebie-jeebies from them for some reason. Apparently, women are more perceptive to this than men.
So, I'm curious if you have ever met a person that gave off that vibe, and what in particular gave you that vibe?
18 votes -
The doomed mouse utopia that inspired the ‘Rats of NIMH’. Dr. John Bumpass Calhoun spent the ’60s and ’70s playing god to thousands of rodents.
10 votes -
A theory of creepiness
4 votes -
The man who confessed to being a serial killer
7 votes -
Politically polarized brains share an intolerance of uncertainty
5 votes -
Creeps and creepiness
3 votes