Botanist Stefano Mancuso: ‘You can anaesthetise all plants. This is extremely fascinating’
An advocate of plant intelligence, the Italian author discusses the complex ways in which plants communicate, whether they are conscious, and what his findings mean for vegans
Happiness, income satiation and turning points around the world
Nature Human Behaviour - Jebb et al. use data from the Gallup World Poll to show that happiness does not rise indefinitely with income: globally, income satiation occurs at US$95,000 for life...
What's stranger than bees telling time? How we learned that they can.
Bees can tell time—and even get jet lag. But that's not something scientists could simply assume. Here's how to test the sensory perception of an insect.
In Search of New Terrain: Similarities Between Travel and the Psychedelic Experience
A psychedelic experience is commonly referred to as a ‘trip’ or a ‘journey’, and the analogy with travel is a helpful one; psychedelics take you to new internal territory, whereas travelling takes you to new external territory. But I believe there are several ways in which we can compare tripping to travelling, and these similarities…
WASHINGTON (AP) — Our capacity to care about others may have very, very ancient origins, a new study suggests. It might have been deep-rooted in prehistoric animals that lived millions of years ago, before fish and mammals like us diverged on the tree of life, according to researchers who published their study Thursday in the journal Science .
(Inside Science) -- Modern human culture seems to evolve at a dizzying rate. Changes in the media we consume and technology we use often far outstrip our ability to keep up. But there have been few attempts to actually measure this phenomenon. “All we have is this sense that culture evolves really quickly, but relative to what?” said Armand Leroi, an evolutionary biologist at Imperial College London.
The Google Effect & Transactive Memory: We remember Where data is more than What it is! - Cognition Today
The Google effect, an extension of our transactive memory system, describes our poor memory for information which is easily available online. We remember where information is better than the information itself.
A group of leading neuroscientists has used a conference at Cambridge University to make an official declaration recognising consciousness in animals. The declaration was made at the Francis Crick …
Altruistic babies? Study shows infants are willing to give up food, help others
New research by the University of Washington’s Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences finds that altruism may begin in infancy. In a study of nearly 100 19-month-olds, researchers found that...