PsyPost on MSN
New psychology research shows people consistently underestimate how often things go wrong across society
People systematically underestimate how often things go wrong in the world—a bias researchers call the “failure gap.” This ...
When faced with recurring patterns of behavior or emotions, one may ask oneself, "This again?" It is common to seek a reason ...
Professor E. S. Dandaura's inaugural lecture at Nasarawa State University, Keffi (delivered on April 15, 2026), offers an ...
Social media manifestation gurus claim visualizing your goals will make your wildest dreams come true. Unfortunately, science ...
The issue stems from a deeper conflict within statistical physics. A key principle used to explain why time appears to move ...
Virtual reality can place people inside the lived experience of bias rather than asking them to imagine it. Some virtual ...
Maria Giménez Cavallo and Jo Ann Cavallo explore the fraught relationship between the media, marketing, and government, and the complex implications for truth, power, and propaganda.
The same brain cells activate when you see something and when you imagine it, helping explain why mental images can feel so ...
Former AEI scholar and Bush administration advisor David Wurmser said during an appearance on NTD News --an anti-communist ...
How does the brain create mental images? A new study reveals that visual imagination and perception share a common neural code.
Why can images of things we have seen seem so real when we later recall them from memory? A new study led by Cedars-Sinai ...
The debate about AI’s impact is not just about technology; it is also about the gap between how it works and how it appears ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results