How the 2008 recession shifted class identity
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 15-Jun-2026 06:15 ET (15-Jun-2026 10:15 GMT/UTC)
A new study explores how the economic and social class of Americans changed after the Great Recession.
From climate action to public health, even widely supported solutions often fail to gain momentum. Researchers at the University of Zurich now show why: people differ in how much social support they need before changing their behavior. Measuring these individual “tipping points” could help make social change campaigns more effective.
A new study has mapped by age young children’s ability to understand and practise deception for the first time – and results indicate many can sense it even before turning one year old.
A new study is challenging one of neuroscience’s most enduring ideas: that the brain’s reward system exists to make us feel good. Instead, researchers argue that it is built to optimize energy. Dopamine and opioids, long cast as the chemistry of pleasure, do not function as feel-good messengers but as physiological agents that optimize the body’s metabolic budget. In this view, motivation arises from rising physiological needs and reinforcement is the gain when those needs are resolved. The theory fundamentally reframes reinforcement learning. Rather than viewing reward as the pursuit of pleasurable outcomes, it proposes that learning is driven by metabolic optimization, or, the brain’s effort to minimize energetic costs and maximize gains. Within this framework, dopamine-and opioid-related processes such as habit formation, addiction, music and even social bonding are understood as expressions of a core biological principle: behaviors are reinforced when they improve the efficiency of the body’s energy regulation. In turn, dopamine-and opioid-related psychopathologies are reframed as conditions in which the brain’s energy-management system is no longer operating optimally.
A smartphone app designed to tackle the underlying psychological causes of premature ejaculation can significantly improve sex life and delay ejaculation, while offering a way to reduce stigma around the condition, say researchers.
New research co-led by Liu-Qin Yang, a professor of psychology at Portland State University (PSU), suggests that the true damage of a toxic boss goes far deeper than a bad mood — it fundamentally alters how employees perceive their own humanity. Published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, the study identifies “organizational dehumanization” as the primary mechanism that strips employees of their agency, leading to severe burnout and a collapse in workplace collaboration.