A new study from the University of Washington gets specific about how much screen time teens clock on their phones during the ...
Learn how Frank and Lillian Gilbreth’s management theory revolutionized workplace efficiency through motion study and standardization.
Background Prehospital delays remain critical barriers to timely acute coronary syndrome (ACS) care, particularly for ...
If you have ever sworn off social media for a week or two because you sensed it was feeding your anxiety or dampening your mood, you may be on to something. A new study out last week in JAMA Network ...
When it comes to marathon training, more has always seemed better: more mileage, more workouts, more weekly runs. But new research suggests that how you time that training load matters just as much as ...
A new study hints that age-related changes in our brains may explain why time feels like it's slipping away faster with every passing year. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an ...
TORONTO — The screen time habits formed in a child’s early years may determine how well they perform in elementary school, according to a large Canadian study that tracked thousands of children from ...
What if the problem with social media isn’t just how much we use it, but when? A new study suggests that scrolling and posting through the small hours may be a red flag for mental wellbeing – and the ...
Pew Research Center conducted this study to understand how parents of kids ages 12 and younger approach their children’s technology use and screen time. For this analysis, we surveyed 3,054 parents ...
Last week I went to a psychology conference at Oxford University. Although the conference wasn’t about time, it made me ponder the different ways in which the human mind experiences time. It was a ...
Reading for pleasure in the U.S. fell 40% over two decades, the study found. Fewer Americans are opening a book for fun each day, with reading for pleasure in the United States down 40% over the past ...
From 2003 to 2023, the share of Americans who read for pleasure fell 40 percent, a sharp decline that is part of a continuing downward trend. By Maggie Astor Any reader knows the unique delight of ...