Psychology
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceHuman memory is flawed. But a new book says that’s OKThe new book Memory Lane convincingly demonstrates how memories are like Lego buildings that are constantly being rebuilt. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceParenthood may help the brain stay youngA study of nearly 38,000 adults shows that the number of kids correlates with coordination of brain regions’ activities — regardless of parents’ sex. 
- 			 Science & Society Science & SocietyWhy some chaos-seekers just want to watch the world burnA political scientist explains how a confluence of personality traits and perceived status loss can encourage some people to generate chaos as a solution to their woes. By Sujata Gupta
- 			 Psychology PsychologyBreaking negative thought patterns could ward off anxiety, depressionGetting stuck in a negative loop is part of many mental health disorders. A new therapy focuses more on these thought patterns than the thoughts themselves. By Sujata Gupta
- 			 Artificial Intelligence Artificial IntelligenceAre AI chatbot ‘personalities’ in the eye of the beholder?Defining AI chatbot personality could be based on how a bot “feels” about itself or on how a person feels about the bot they’re interacting with. By Sujata Gupta
- 			 Psychology PsychologySurvivors of the LA fires will face a complex blend of mental health challengesLogistical needs, like employment and housing, along with psychological needs must be met after disasters like the LA wildfires, research shows. By Sujata Gupta
- 			 Humans HumansHow child soldiers heal after the trauma of warFor more than two decades, Theresa Betancourt has studied Sierra Leone’s former child soldiers. Her new book Shadows into Light tells their stories. 
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyHumans have linked emotions to the same body parts for 3,000 years3,000-year-old clay tablets show that some associations between emotion and parts of the body have remained the same for millennia. By Jason Bittel
- 			 Psychology PsychologyResearchers seek, and find, a magical illusion for the earsA contest to design a sound-only magic trick could help psychologists learn about differences between visual and auditory perception. 
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyThe ‘midlife crisis’ is too simple a story, scientists saySome scientists want to shift focus to the teen mental health crisis. But the course of happiness is too complex for simplistic theories, experts warn. By Sujata Gupta
- 			 Psychology PsychologySmiles tweaked by AI can boost attraction, a speed-dating study showsUsing face filters to alter expressions manipulated feelings of attraction, raising questions about how such technology may influence social interactions. 
- 			 Psychology PsychologyNavigation research often excludes the environment. That’s starting to changeParticipants “navigating” on a lab computer have shaped navigation knowledge. Studies that add in the environment challenge those findings. By Sujata Gupta