Researchers in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins Medicine report that a computerized study of 36
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Food prices for consumers in ethnic enclaves could explain difference in assimilation rates
In ethnic enclaves, Mexican immigrants tend to spend less on food per week while East Asian immigrants spend more, which
Unless we spot changes, most life experiences are fabricated from memories: Change detection plays key role in how we construct reality, new model suggests
We may not be able to change recent events in our lives, but how well we remember them plays a
Having the right name helps one to find housing
Over the past four decades, the incidence of housing discrimination against members of ethnic minorities has fallen in both Western
Relational mobility may influence your interpersonal behaviors
A large-scale analysis has suggested it’s easier for people to form and replace relationships in North America, Europe and Latin
New study debunks Dale Carnegie advice to ‘put yourself in their shoes’
Putting yourself in someone else’s shoes and relying on intuition or “gut instinct” isn’t an accurate way to determine what
How physics explains the evolution of social organization: Constructal law reveals how people come together to have greater access to scarce resources
A scientist at Duke University says the natural evolution of social organizations into larger and more complex communities that exhibit
Is it their own fault?! How people judge the exclusion of others
The way people view the social exclusion of others varies — depending on how much they think the excluded person
Dads often earn more, even if they’re not harder workers
When it comes to earning potential, it pays to be a dad, new UBC research suggests. The study, published in
Fair classroom practices disarm threat of evaluation retaliation
While tuition inflation presents a challenge for many college-bound students, an area of growing concern for many universities is “grade