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Miller-McCune

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Archive for Behavior

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Group Members’ Insecurity Can Foster Being a Jerk

If you arrogantly proclaim "We're No. 1," it's probably because you know darn well you're not.

News Fatigue Hits Young Adults

Generation Text may not be tuning out the media due to lack of interest as is widely believed, but rather due to the overconsumption of news and information on new platforms, a study suggests. 

The "mouse lifestyle," observed

Mice are valuable in research because they're genetically similar to humans and, unlike in people, scientists can manipulate their genes to better understand brain functions, psychology and psychiatry. However, there is a drawback.

Workplace Serenity is Just a Poster Away

Art posters on the walls of an office lower both the anger and stress levels of men but don't seem to have the same effect on women, according to new research.

The Rat Pack

Oh, those Norway rats. You see them hanging out in cliques, doing what all the cool rodents do, following the "in-crowd."

Another blow to free will

As we reported in February, students who are exposed to the idea that free will is an illusion are more likely to cheat on tests. Not surprisingly, the notion that our actions aren’t truly controlled by our conscious mind seems to undermine our sense of personal responsibility. Well, our ethical foundations eroded a bit more this week.

Risque Business

In the advertising world, “sex sells” is an accepted truism. In a new study of the male brain, Stanford University researchers have determined why.

Is the GOP in your DNA?

A new school of research suggests that our genetic makeup plays a role in our political behavior. But liberals don’t simply pop out of the womb.

The Fault Really Does Lie in Our Stars

Students who were taught that free will is an illusion were more likely to cheat on tests, according to new research.

Gridiron Violence Off the Field

High school football players and wrestlers are far more likely to get into violent altercations than their non-athletic classmates, according to a new finding.