Mind & Behavior

Mind & Behavior

Study the science of how we think, feel, and act, with insights that help you better understand yourself and others.

Close-up of a hand touching a neck, set against a background with textured patterns and a large shadow of a hand overlapping the central image.
Depression can cause you to think too much — and physically sense too little.
The acceptance of death is deeply embedded in our culture; it's time to overthrow that idea.
X-ray images of a shoulder and a wrist with highlighted areas in red indicating injuries or inflammation, set against a colorful, abstract background.
Fixing chronic pain in the body may sometimes require a treatment focused on the brain.
A display of various marble busts and sculptures arranged on two wooden shelves against a dark green wall.
An argument for emphasis on subjective experience.
A blurred profile of a person's face appears against a vibrant yellow background representing an abstract sense technostress.
The mindless implementation of AI tools can come at a cost for our teams. Here are some red flags and solutions.
Black and white wireframe rendering of a human brain, with the left hemisphere shown in sparse lines and the right hemisphere rendered more densely detailed, highlighting areas associated with cognition.
A new framework describes how thought arises from the coordination of neural activity driven by oscillating electric fields — a.k.a. brain “waves” or “rhythms.”
An image shows three panels of brainwave patterns on the left, with colorful lines of computer code on the right.
33 years ago, the theoretical biologist Robert Rosen offered an answer to the question "Is life computable?"