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Stable Bedtime Boosts Kids’ Behavior and Emotional Control

11 November 2024 at 20:28
This shows a child at bedtime.Children with regular bedtimes exhibit better emotional control and behavior than those with irregular sleep patterns. Researchers found that consistency in sleep times helps children handle stress and regulate their actions more effectively.

Why Human Culture Never Stops Evolving

9 November 2024 at 15:35
This shows statues of heads.A new study proposes that human culture’s unique power lies not in its ability to accumulate knowledge, as once thought, but in its "open-endedness." Unlike animal cultures that reach limits in evolution, human culture continuously expands, adapting without bounds.

How Social Learning Guides Decisions When Preferences Differ

23 October 2024 at 22:27
This shows statues of heads.A new study shows that humans use social information to guide their decisions, even when others’ preferences differ from their own. Researchers found that people treat social cues as helpful but less reliable than their personal experiences, using them as a tool to explore decision options.

Social Media Verification Drives Polarization and Echo Chambers

23 October 2024 at 15:58
This shows a network of figures.A new study shows that X's verification system, which gives verified users priority in algorithms, can increase polarization and trigger the formation of echo chambers. Researchers used computational modeling to simulate how verified users affect the spread of political opinions on social media. They found that when verified users with entrenched opinions post, their influence can drive polarization, while centrist ideologues can reduce it if present in sufficient numbers.

Cerebellum Plays Key Role in Social and Cognitive Abilities

22 October 2024 at 19:57
This shows a brain.The cerebellum, traditionally linked to motor functions, also plays a vital role in social and cognitive abilities, according to new research. Abnormalities in this brain region not only impair movement but are linked to emotional and behavioral issues, particularly in autism.

Parent-Child Play Shapes Social Skills for Interacting with Peers

21 October 2024 at 21:06
This shows a mom and child playing.How parents and toddlers play together can predict children's future social interactions. By observing over 120 mother-child pairs, researchers found that responsive and assertive behaviors during play were linked to better social competence with peers.

People Empathize with Bullied AI Bots

17 October 2024 at 20:28
This shows a sad little robot.People empathize with AI bots excluded from a virtual game, treating them like social beings in need of fairness. Participants favored giving the AI bot a fair chance in play, with older adults showing a stronger inclination to rectify the perceived unfairness.

Imaging Links Fewer Brain Connections to Autism Social Challenges

14 October 2024 at 20:43
This shows a brain puzzle with missing pieces.A recent study used PET imaging to examine synaptic connections in autistic and non-autistic adults, marking the first time this technology was applied to autism research. Findings show autistic adults have fewer synapses, or connections between brain cells, which closely relates to social and communicative differences in autism.

Smiles Are Contagious: Shared Expression Fosters Connection

11 October 2024 at 00:04
This shows people smiling.Smiles during face-to-face conversations strongly impact connection, with the intensity of one person's smile often influencing the other. Researchers found that speakers smiled more when listeners smiled, especially in same-sex interactions, indicating that mutual smiles foster warmth and comfort.

Social Networks Drive Idea and Misinformation Contagion

9 October 2024 at 20:04
This shows a face made of photos.A recent study examines how the structure of social networks influences the spread of both diseases and ideas, using data collected during the COVID-19 pandemic. Researchers developed a model to analyze not only social connections but also the mechanisms driving contagion and information diffusion.

Salience Network Disruption Tied to Dementia Behavior Changes

7 October 2024 at 20:24
This shows a brain.Researchers have discovered that disruptions in the brain’s salience network, often tied to tau protein buildup, correlate strongly with behavioral changes in people with early-stage dementia. Using advanced brain imaging on 128 participants, they found that as tau impairs this critical network, behavioral symptoms worsen, adding another layer to understanding dementia beyond memory loss.
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