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+1 +1
Empathic People are Natural Targets for Sociopaths
On initial contact, a sociopath will often test other people's empathy, so questions geared towards discovering if you are highly empathic or not should ring alarm bells.
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+21 +1
You Can Smell a Person's Gender
Humans can detect a person's gender through smell alone, even if they don't know they are doing it, a recent study suggests. The study, published in Current Biology details how people are often intrinsically able to identify the gender they are attracted to through smell alone, regardless of their own sexual orientation.
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+8 +1
6 hostage negotiation techniques that will get you what you want
The Behavioral Change Stairway Model was developed by the FBI's hostage negotiation unit, and it shows the five steps to getting someone else to see your point of view and change what they're doing. It's not something that only works with barricaded criminals wielding assault rifles — it applies to most any form of disagreement.
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+11 +1
When Girls Use the Word 'Slut' to Bully Each Other
A new study finds that girls police social hierarchies by slut-shaming one another. Though hashtag campaigns like #YesAllWomen remind us that women are often the victims of men’s misogyny and sexual aggression, men are not the only culprits. A new study finds that young women are guilty of bullying their peers using degrading sexual language.
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+16 +1
Rats Show Regret After Making Wrong Choices, Scientists Say
Could've, should've, would've. Everyone has made the wrong choice at some point in life and suffered regret because of it. Now a new study shows we're not alone in our reaction to incorrect decisions. Rats too can feel regret.
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+18 +1
Tongue Has a Sixth Sense
The human tongue may have a sixth sense—and no, it doesn’t have anything to do with seeing ghosts. Researchers have found that in addition to recognizing sweet, sour, salty, savory, and bitter tastes, our tongues can also pick up on carbohydrates, the nutrients that break down into sugar and form our main source of energy.
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+17 +1
How to Make Your Dog Jealous
My best friend from childhood had two beautiful dogs, a German shepherd named Sari and an Australian shepherd named Chloe. Living on a large pasture in the Midwestern countryside, the dogs were both mellow and incredibly well-behaved... that is, until my friend and I decided to mess with them. No, we didn't engage in dog shaming (see photo above); instead, we did something much more ruthless.
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+34 +1
Suicide Risk May Be Revealed By a Blood Test
Researchers report encouraging advances toward a blood test that can pick up genetic changes linked to suicide. Behaviors can’t be reduced to your genes – they’re far too complicated for that. But genes can lay the foundation for making people more or less likely to respond and act in certain ways, and suicide may be the latest example of that.
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+17 +1
African Wild Dogs, True Best Friends
We saw the impala first, a young buck with a proud set of ridged and twisted horns, like helical rebar, bounding across the open plain at full, desperate gallop. But why?
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+16 +1
Cellphone Addiction Is ‘an Increasingly Realistic Possibility,’ Baylor Study of College Students Reveals
Women college students spend an average of 10 hours a day on their cellphones, with men college students spending nearly eight hours, according to a Baylor University study on cellphone activity published in the Journal of Behavioral Addictions.
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+6 +1
Why Did Crowd Flee Shanghai Subway After Foreigner Fainted?
One Saturday night this summer, a foreigner fainted and fell to the floor of a Shanghai subway car. The passengers around him scattered. Not a single person tried to help. When the train arrived at the next station, hundreds rushed out, nearly trampling each other. The incident was captured on closed-circuit cameras.
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+21 +1
Humans Naturally Follow Crowd Behavior
It happened last Sunday at football stadiums around the country. Suddenly, 50,000 individuals became a single unit, almost a single mind, focused intently on what was happening on the field—that particular touchdown grab or dive into the end zone. Somehow, virtually simultaneously, each of those 50,000 people tuned into what the other 49,999 were looking at.
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+16 +1
Chimps Are Naturally Violent, Study Suggests
For years, anthropologists have watched wild chimpanzees "go ape" and attack each other in coordinated assaults. But until now, scientists were unsure whether interactions with humans had brought on this violent behavior or if it was part of the apes' basic nature.
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+17 +1
What fMRI Can Tell Us About the Thoughts and Minds of Dogs
One neuroscientist is peering into the canine brain, and says he's found evidence that dogs may feel love
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+37 +1
The Intelligent Life of the City Raccoon
Toronto resident Simon Treadwell wheeled a garbage bin onto a snow-bound lot next to his property one evening this past winter. Inside the bin was a smelly mixture of wet and dry cat food, sardines, and fried chicken. Treadwell sprinkled some of the mix on and around the bin, made sure his three motion-activated night vision cameras were on, and went back into his house.
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+16 +1
The growing movement to break technology addiction
A growing number of avid technology users who are adept at social media, smartphone apps and texting are intentionally limiting their usage, according to guest columnists Ricardo Gomez and Stacey Morrison.
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+13 +1
The Imminent Death of the Internet Troll
A new Pew study confirms that online harassment is endemic. But human behavior—and the limits placed on it by both law and society—can change.
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+19 +1
More On Why Smart People Are Not Always Rational
In a previous post I discussed the fascinating case of Paul Frampton who, as the website News Observer put it, “instantly was transformed from superstar particle phenomenologist with three Oxford University degrees to international tabloid fodder” when he fell for a honey trap drug smuggling scam. In it, I talked about irrationality in Mensa, the “high IQ society”, and the fact that rational behavior is not, as most of us assume, a direct product of intelligence.
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+16 +1
Bats Can Transmit "Signal Jamming" Sounds
Bats are dependent upon echolocation to catch their insect prey. But competition for resources is fierce among bats, so they've evolved the capacity to "jam" the signals of other bats to send them off target.
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+3 +2
How a Beanstalk Grows
You don't often think of plants as having behavior, but this video clearly shows a beanstalk "looking" for support.
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