3d-rendering-of-a-dark-cell-at-night-stockpack-adobe-stock-347292952-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date March 21, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsPsychologySociology Tagged , anxiety, Augustine Brannigan, college students, crying, emotional depression, experimental design, Office of Naval Research, penologists, persistent scientific errors, Philip G. Zimbardo, prison breaks, prisoner abuse, prisoners, psychologists, public policy, rage, Retraction Crisis, Retraction Watch, San Quentin State Prison, self-correcting, social psychology, Stanford Prison Experiment, Stanford University, study design, Thibault Le Texier, University of Calgary Retract the Stanford Prison Experiment? Denyse O’Leary March 21, 2025 Bioethics, Psychology, Sociology 7 Beware of wildly popular sociology that tells us that our public policy preferences are somehow embedded in human nature. Life was never as simple as that. Read More ›
Cuttlefish Type post Author Daniel Witt Date March 6, 2024 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , biologists, Brian Miller, Cambridge University, camouflage, cuttlefish, Darwinian mechanisms, fitness landscapes, Irreducible Complexity, MIT, mutations, NBC, Office of Naval Research, probabilistic resources, reverse-engineering, skin, Sudan, Systems Biology, Washington Post Yet Another Engineering Innovation from Cuttlefish Daniel Witt March 6, 2024 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 It was never a given that when scientists looked deeper into life, they would find such exquisite designs; but they did. Read More ›
ozzie Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 12, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionLife SciencesNeuroscience & MindPsychology Tagged , __k-review, Department of Defense, Dogs, Emory University, evolution, hot dogs, Office of Naval Research, Research, U.S. Navy Defense Department-Funded Study Finds that Dogs Relish Praise and Hot Dogs David Klinghoffer September 12, 2017 Evolution, Life Sciences, Neuroscience & Mind, Psychology 4 This is indeed cutting-edge research. Given that, did you wonder if they’d bring evolution into it? Of course they do. Read More ›