We react more harshly to an erring algorithm than an erring human
Erring algorithms elicit harsher reactions compared to erring humans. A new study published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior...
Erring algorithms elicit harsher reactions compared to erring humans. A new study published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior...
A new article published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology suggests that people perceive food that weighs less as healthier...
Recently, a group of researchers reported the first ever sighting of an albino chimpanzee in the wild. The infant was...
The effects of Science Skepticism is out in the open for all to see, and enumerate - the number of...
Many animal communities have traditional ways of doing things. Some of these cultural traditions have bearing on the survival of...
Over the years, there has been an explosion in studies investigating mindfulness as a practice and as a personality trait....
Depression often leads to a drop in libido. But, what about the reverse? How likely is the lack of sexual...
Soccer is a game that in many parts of the world is taken rather seriously. Perhaps we see the most...
‘Pandemics balloon in poor neighbourhoods’ is a long-standing dogma in epidemiology. People living in crowded, tightly packed environments, working in...
In animals, certain traits function as ‘fitness indicators’. These traits (like the peacock’s tail) are signs of genetic quality or...
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