Cutting NSF Is Like Liquidating Your Finest Investment
Look closely at your mobile phone or tablet. Touch-screen technology, speech recognition, digital sound recording and the internet were all developed using […]
National geography-test scores released in the US last week – part of the National Assessment of Educational Progress – revealed that US […]
“What Constitutes a Theoretical Contribution in Family Business?” by Trish Reay, University of Alberta, and David A. Whetten, Brigham Young University, was first […]
Duncan Watts writes in New Scientist that ‘common sense’ can help us make sense of human behaviour – but can also undermine […]
Report exposes poor quality of social science research Times of India Readings in the philosophy of social science Google Books Harvard study […]
Emilio J. Castilla, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Stephen Benard, Indiana University published “The Paradox of Meritocracy in Organizations,” in the December […]
Tom Jacobs reports in Miller McCune Magazine on a recent study which finds anxiety, amusement, and even exercise, can compel people to share information. […]
The American Anthropological Association presents the science, history and lived experience of race in the United States in Smithsonian National History Museum […]
Seeing and experiencing violence makes aggression “normal” for children (Social Psychological and Personality Science) Are coalitions the inevitable future for UK governments? (Political Science) […]