Research on attachment, stress physiology, and emotion regulation shows that people who shut down during conflict are often experiencing two repeating internal patterns. Interrupting these patterns is ...
Here’s what happens when email apnea and associated anxiety causes shallow breathing: Marsh said the body drops into a ...
Oxygen shaped the world as we know it. It’s why we hiccup and why frogs croak. It’s so good that some turtles have learned to suck it in using not just their nose and mouth, but also… another orifice.
Highway 46 snakes through some of the most pristine forest you’ll find anywhere in southern Oregon, climbing steadily into ...
But the Sterling Hill Mining Museum in Ogdensburg is home to the planet’s most diverse collection of fluorescent minerals, ...
This is where memory is essential to identity formation. The self is assembled not from everything that has happened to us, but from what the brain has chosen to preserve and retrieve.
Brain freeze — the sharp, seconds-long headache we get from ingesting something cold — is rooted in the way our brain senses ...
A journalist with no Portuguese spent 30 minutes a day matching spoken words to animated scenes on a screen. By day three, ...
Scientists may have new answers to why pop-ups or notifications grab our attention. Turns out our attention is on a cycle, shifting seven to 10 times per second. This rhythmic occurrence may be ...
Life doesn't arrive in neat chapters. It flows, one conversation bleeding into the next, one thought quietly reshaping the one that follows. Yet our brains do something remarkable: they preserve a ...
Seep deprivation impairs social memory by disrupting oxytocin signaling in the hippocampus and prelimbic cortex.