Women charged with murder who plead self-defense are more likely to be perceived as guilty if they have straight blonde hair and "a slender and elegant appearance."
What using a club drug to treat depression reveals about the brain
How medical science made "battling" cancer less than revelatory.
Taking the time to enjoy your latte in a well-designed coffee shop is good for your soul.
New York City's regulation of a Jewish tradition does little more than add to a growing aura of hostility and ignorance surrounding circumcision.
Your new digital therapist
Before the cosmetic surgery obsession came these early twentieth-century innovations in "beautification."
Maximizing the potential of our increasingly vast base of scientific knowledge
Genes influencing depression also bolstered our ancestors' immune systems -- an understanding that's informing experimental therapies.
Get enough sleep. Write inane tweets. Understanding mental blocks and why quality expression "doesn't just come out like vomit after a bad meal"
Or so says "physics."
The success of a hospital system in Washington state should be a strong signal that patient decision aids are powerful quality-improving, cost-cutting tools.
You can read women's political ideology in their facial features. Call it the "The Bachmann Effect."
The presence of the DNA persisted into old age and correlated with a slightly decreased risk of Alzheimer's disease.
A forward-thinking anti-discriminatory campaign
Veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder swear that support dogs lead to remarkable improvements, but research has yet to support their widespread use.
"Each lapse is like the letting fall of a ball of string which one is carefully winding up." A timeless validation of grit and persistence as secrets to success
We may be more open-minded than we care to think.
"The peculiar mix of modernism and death reflects the things most kitsch, troubling, and beautiful about our modern culture."
The 5,000 year history of the "art" comes down to physics, spirituality, and risk