Uncertainty makes us uncomfortable. Yet the research is clear: It is essential for growth. The challenge isn’t eliminating ambiguity but learning to navigate it.
I had no idea if this was just the usual; I was a safari newbie. For years, this had been at the very top of my bucket list ...
For Punch, a 7-month-old macaque, fame and loneliness have collided, leaving the world watching as he clings to a stuffed ...
During a solar eclipse, Galapagos tortoises show strange and fascinating behaviour. They mate, lift their heads, and seem to stare at the sky. Scientists say this rare reaction highlights how cosmic ...
As Valentine's Day approaches, we take a look at monogamy and its alternatives among animals — including humans.
Travel + Leisure on MSN
I Took My Kids on an African Safari—Here's Why It Was One of Our All-time Best Vacations
We saw baby elephants in Kenya's Maasai Mara and swam with colorful fish in Zanzibar's coral reefs.
PsyPost on MSN
Scientists asked men smell hundreds of different vulvar odors to test the “leaky-cue hypothesis”
A new study published in Evolution and Human Behavior suggests that modern women may not chemically signal fertility through ...
If you have siblings, you may remember fighting for your parents’ attention when you were younger. It turns out sibling ...
Young primates in a southern African nature park were observed to constantly interfere when their mother was giving attention to a younger brother or sister.
The investigative minds at How to Survive analyze baboon behavior, attack mechanics, and defensive strategies to protect yourself in nature. Authorities release videos, photos of 'potential subject' ...
Sibling rivalry might not unique to humans. New scientific research shows that baboon siblings in southern Africa also feel jealousy toward each other.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results