What’s more distracting: something overt or something subtle?
In 2009, Elinor Ostrom won the Nobel Prize for economics.
When scientists scanned the brains of two types of extroverts—”people persons” and “go-getters”—they found similarities, but also distinct differences in their brain anatomy.
An attempt to label the thylacine’s hunting style has led to a new classification system that can predict the hunting behaviors of mammals from measurements of just a few forelimb bones.
What’s more distracting: something overt or something subtle?
In 2009, Elinor Ostrom won the Nobel Prize for economics.
When scientists scanned the brains of two types of extroverts—”people persons” and “go-getters”—they found similarities, but also distinct differences in their brain anatomy.
An attempt to label the thylacine’s hunting style has led to a new classification system that can predict the hunting behaviors of mammals from measurements of just a few forelimb bones.