-
An Infant’s Refined Tongue
ScienceNOW: Your baby’s language skills may surprise you. Before they speak—before they even crawl—infants can distinguish between two languages they’ve never heard before just by looking at the face of a speaker. And if they’re
-
MONKEY SEE, HUMAN DO
Yale Daily News: Sometimes looking into the past can inform our futures. At least, that’s the guiding principle at Yale’s monkey lab. Technically called the Comparative Cognition Laboratory (or CapLab), the center is home to
-
David Brooks Sends Rahm Emanuel an Early Valentine—Again
ChicagoMag: When New York Times columnist David Brooks and Rahm Emanuel were both working in Washington, the two seemed to have had a good thing going: Rahm fed David snippets of stuff happening in the
-
Language May Play Key Role In Learning Number Meanings
RedOrbit: New research conducted with deaf people in Nicaragua shows that language may play an important role in learning the meanings of numbers. Field studies by University of Chicago psychologist Susan Goldin-Meadow and a team
-
Autism, Moral Decision-Making and the Mind
PsychCentral: A new study suggests high-functioning autistic adults appear to have trouble making moral judgments in certain situations. Specifically, the researchers found that autistic adults were more likely than non-autistic subjects to blame someone for
-
Cities try to cut the fat with weight-loss programs
Los Angeles Times: Ten pounds can seem like a hundred when you’re trying to lose weight. So just think how Oklahoma City residents must feel. They’re looking to lose a million. Across the country, mayors