The Science of Stuttering: What May Cause It, and How to Treat It
Contrary to popular belief, stuttering isn't caused by anxiety.
Contrary to popular belief, stuttering isn't caused by anxiety.
A new study verifies that while you might sound like a total weirdo, talking about yourself in the third person can help regulate your emotional responses.
There's more to the noted physiologist than just the famous "Pavlovian response."
"As soon as (we) uncovered it and realized this was a horn of a triceratops and not just another leg bone or part of a hip, it made the site really exciting."
Joseph Dalton Hooker ate penguins and discovered volcanoes on the 1840s expedition.
It's not just the astonishing amount of rainfall.
The process is environmentally friendly and the results are beautiful.
The process is environmentally friendly and the results are beautiful.
Smoking can cause breasts to droop, but breastfeeding doesn't.
As The Field Museum welcomes a new titanosaur, SUE’s getting a new look and new digs.
Unable to run away, plants have developed some vicious defense mechanisms.
Alfred Kinsey forever changed the way we think, and talk, about sex—partly by asking more than 18,000 men and women deeply personal questions about their most intimate habits.
Just like the English Bard, Tang died in 1616, and he also penned dramatic works and romances.
It's easy to forget that there are vast rivers of wind whooshing just a few miles above our heads at speeds that could put most hurricanes and tornadoes to shame, but jet streams affect us every day without our realizing it.
Don't feel guilty about pouring that fourth cup.
A new study explores the "runaway train" problem of lupus and other autoimmune conditions.
But you will get them by not wearing flip-flops in a gym shower.
While we wait for the eighth and final season of 'Game of Thrones' to premiere on April 14, we explore the physics behind the series's most glorious beasts.
The currency, which dates from 253 CE to 274 CE, consists of bronze and a small amount of silver.
No cell phones. No WiFi. No radio. It's either your dream or your nightmare.
A new Danish study links high HDL with higher, not lower, mortality risk.
Researchers realized the reptiles were easier to catch when they (the humans) wore blue shirts.
It all boils down to basic—albeit sweet—chemistry.
"It's like having an irresistible chocolate shop on every corner."