Social Justice Why Asian Americans Excel at Academics New research suggests hard-driving “tiger moms” are just one factor. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice The Eco-Unfriendly Appeal of a Lush Green Lawn New research from Arizona finds we associate traditional, water-intensive landscaping with high social status. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice Facebook, Twitter Usage Linked to Higher Divorce Rates New research finds a correlation between marital dissatisfaction and social media usage. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice New Data Finds High Rate of Hearing Loss Among Musicians In Germany, professional musicians are nearly four times as likely as non-musicians to suffer noise-induced hearing loss. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice I.M. Smart: Middle Initials Signal Intelligence A first-of-its-kind study finds we associate middle initials with intellectual heft. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice The Ugliest Game of Telephone: The Way I Hear It, Our Enemies Are to Blame New research suggests bias accumulates as stories get passed down from one person to another. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice Frequent Liars Club New research finds Brits fib a bit more than Americans, but that a small subset of the population tells most of the untruths in both countries. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice The Unfortunate Lesson of Kony 2012: Nuance Diminishes Outrage Research undertaken as a video about an African warlord went viral suggests such a film can inspire moral anger—so long as it sticks to an oversimplified message. Tom Jacobs
Economics Leisure-Time Creative Endeavors Make for Better Employees New research finds a link between off-hours creative activity and several measures of job performance. Tom Jacobs
Social Justice When Things Look Dark, Country Music Gets Sunnier New research finds socioeconomic conditions impact the type of songs that become hits, but in opposite ways for pop and country music. Tom Jacobs