Economics Drill Sergeant Bosses Don’t Get the Job Done Even if they think it's meant to motivate, workers respond badly to workplace abuse. Nathan Collins
Economics Too Hot to Hire Are you an attractive woman looking for a job? Acknowledging your beauty could keep potential employers from discriminating against you. Bettina Chang
Environment Twitter’s No Beacon of Democracy, But It’s Better Than Expected It's pretty bad, but it's less status-conscious and less insult-prone than you'd think. Nathan Collins
Social Justice How Moms Change Brains Seeing mom makes young children's brains function more like those of adolescents. Nathan Collins
Social Justice A Poor Sense of Smell Might Mean Death Is Near You probably won't smell Death before he knocks at your door. Nathan Collins
Economics Why That Guy Keeps Reminding You He Went to an Ivy League School It's sometimes the people least secure in their place who really, really want us to know they belong. Paul Bisceglio
News in Brief Does Cramming for a Math Test Help You Graduate High School? A study of Norwegian students suggests it might. Nathan Collins
Social Justice The Bitter Taste of Hostility Swallowing a bitter pill isn't just a metaphor for an unpleasant experience—research shows bitter tastes can cause outright hostility. Bettina Chang
Social Justice When and Where HIV Began, and How It Spread HIV spread by train from 1920s Kinshasa, researchers say. Nathan Collins
Social Justice For Memory, Curiosity Is Its Own Reward A new study suggests a neural link between curiosity, motivation, and memory. Nathan Collins