According to Princeton psychologist Alexander Todorov, we need to better understand the judgments we make about other people's faces if we want a fair society.
The idea that what we eat and drink has direct impact on our mood is not a new one, but the theory behind this intuition is now a central field of research.
A woman who spent most of her life living with dissociative disorder explains how it began, how she was treated, and why she sometimes misses her "parts".
Melissa was in her early teens when she first began to sense something wasn't quite right with her hearing. Years later she read a magazine article about a condition called misophonia, which described exactly how she was feeling.
Imagine the sound of someone's nails scratching a blackboard. Now imagine hearing this sound again, but this time it is literally unbearable. Lynne Malcolm and Olivia Willis enter the world of misophonia.
Auditory hallucinations are typically associated with schizophrenia and psychosis. But the latest research shows hearing voices is far more commonplace. Lynne Malcolm and Olivia Willis report.
Like oral cultures around the world, Indigenous Australians use cues from the landscape to recall and pass on important knowledge, cultural values and wisdom. Lynne Malcolm and Olivia Willis discover how these songlines operate as a potent form of cultural memory.
When Jeanette Purkis was first diagnosed with autism two decades ago, the condition was stigmatised, and poorly understood. She shares her story of surviving, thriving, and learning to accept herself.
According to Princeton psychologist Alexander Todorov, we need to better understand the judgments we make about other people's faces if we want a fair society.
The idea that what we eat and drink has direct impact on our mood is not a new one, but the theory behind this intuition is now a central field of research.
A woman who spent most of her life living with dissociative disorder explains how it began, how she was treated, and why she sometimes misses her "parts".
Melissa was in her early teens when she first began to sense something wasn't quite right with her hearing. Years later she read a magazine article about a condition called misophonia, which described exactly how she was feeling.