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From traits like extraversion to specific habits, there are many ways a couple can match. New research tests whether it helps ...
Everybody has a little more control than they think.’ A neuroscientist explains how we can become architects of our emotions ...
Practising Carl Rogers’s unconditional positive regard helps me be more compassionate and less judgmental – of myself too ...
The difference between a brief flirtation and an all-consuming love affair is one of interest. Put a different way: the thing ...
New research shows that people satisfy their curiosity in different ways. Are you a hunter, a busybody or a dancer?
Molly Williamson is an associate production editor at Aeon+Psyche. She lives in London.
Incorporating ancient African wisdom into wellbeing interventions could push positive psychology beyond its Western roots ...
More people than ever are going solo. We identified a gender difference that hints at the ingredients needed to enjoy it ...
A brain glitch? Quantum entanglement? Here are some of the best and oddest explanations for déjà vu we have from science ...
Though relationships are grounded in shared memories, some gaps and inaccuracies can help us live well in a social world ...
I’m in a Zoom meeting, speaking to a screen full of black squares, trying to coax voices out of the void. The other callers are all members of an executive board, and they’re in turmoil over the ...
There is something comforting about realising that, even in Homer’s day, people wondered what the hell their dreams meant ...
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