New research suggests that assertive Asian-Americans may be penalized for not adhering to racial stereotypes that peg them more as meek followers.
New research from Stanford University shows that more than 1.1 million adults in the U.S. may unwittingly wander around at night.
New research in Psychological Science uncovers a deterrent to our ability to relate to other people: our political ideologies.
New research in Health Affairs suggests that people in health care should consider more than just the costs and benefits of different courses of treatment.
New research suggests that overweight and obese drivers find it more difficult to buckle up a standard seatbelt.
New research suggests that companies should send out emails in batches to curb employees' desire to self-interrupt and push them to focus on their most pressing tasks.
New research suggests that women's perceptions of the mating market, not their job opportunities, may be driving their career ambitions.
New research uncovers an uplifting reality about the grueling job-search routine: Those who stick with it ultimately get rewarded.
Forget Simon Cowell. New research suggests that, to effectively critique musical pitch, the aging singing competition needs speakers of a tone language.
Places high in income disparity have dishonest students who think they have to cheat to keep up with their unscrupulous classmates.
Yes, smoking kills. But new research in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology uncovers a positive side effect on a person's self-control.
New research suggests that, when food-insecure mothers regulate consumption, children don't learn how to stop themselves from overeating.
New research in Science shows that, unlike intuitive thinking, activating the analytical cognitive system promotes religious skepticism.
Boasting about one's achievements may be tacky, but at least it's not tied to the racism and homophobia that those who were born to privilege are more likely to display.
A literature review on family dining habits shows that children who seldom eat out consume less soda and more fruits and vegetables.
Mexico has one of the highest obesity rates in the world, and new research suggests that weight misperception may be the reason why.
New research from University of California, Los Angeles, finds that enemies appear bigger and stronger when brandishing a weapon.
A longitudinal study uncovers the lifelong consequences of child abuse and exposure to interpersonal conflict in the first two years of life.
Researchers in Germany find that mental health practitioners tend to diagnose ADHD using their intuition and unclear rules of thumb, not recognized diagnostic criteria.
New research in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology suggests that anti-gay prejudice may stem from restrictive upbringings and repressed homosexual desires.