BEHAVIOR

Apr 27 2026FINANCE

How Rising Costs Are Changing the Way Americans Spend Their Money

Around four out of five people in the U. S. have started cutting back on expenses lately, and it often begins with something as simple as filling up their gas tank. A small increase in price there can push people to rethink other areas of spending too. For some, dining out or weekend trips are the f

reading time less than a minute
Apr 22 2026BUSINESS

Hotel Study Pull‑Back: Why the Findings Were Recalled

The journal announced that it has withdrawn a research paper about how the look and feel of boutique hotels influence guests’ plans to return. The original study claimed that both the physical setup and the way information is shared in a hotel’s environment affect customers’ overall image of the pla

reading time less than a minute
Apr 22 2026HEALTH

Why porn habits don’t always match what people believe

Porn use is everywhere online, but the problems it causes aren’t equally understood. Some people feel they watch too much or it messes with their life, yet research mostly looks at small, similar groups. Most studies don’t dig into why some folks struggle more than others. A big idea called the Mor

reading time less than a minute
Apr 21 2026LIFESTYLE

Raising a Calm Indoor Pup in Any Aussie Home

Dogs love to explore, but when they live inside a house or apartment, owners must give them a safe and interesting world. The first step is to set up clear rules that everyone follows, such as where the dog can sleep and which furniture is off‑limits. When people give praise, treats or a quick pla

reading time less than a minute
Apr 21 2026TECHNOLOGY

Making AI Moral: Why a Robot Can’t Pray

Anthropic, the maker of the Claude chatbot, says it wants its AI to act “good, wise and virtuous. ” The company has even teamed up with Catholic leaders to try to teach Claude values. Yet, a machine that never touches a body can’t experience the parts of religion that actually shape morals. Re

reading time less than a minute
Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Getting Around Campus: How Students Move and Why It Matters

Walking or biking to school isn’t just about getting exercise. For many students, it’s part of a daily routine they don’t even think about. But researchers wanted to know how common this habit really is. They studied thousands of students across Canada to see how many actually choose active ways to

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026ENTERTAINMENT

When Celebrities Treat Workers Poorly

Some big names forget that service workers are people too. From rude comments to throwing food, their behavior often goes viral. Chloe Fineman once used her TV fame as a free pass to skip a reservation, ignoring empty tables at a fancy restaurant. Hailey Bieber got called out by a hostess who said s

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Fun and Fuel: How a War and Gas Prices Are Quietly Slowing America’s Play‑Time

The recent flare‑up between Iran and the United States has quietly nudged many Americans to pause their weekend plans. When a major geopolitical event is announced, people tend to hold off on discretionary spending—just like investors sometimes pull back from the market. This pattern is especially

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026LIFESTYLE

Keeping Kids Off Screens: A Simple Plan

Parents often feel powerless when their children demand more screen time, but a new approach shows that limits are both doable and beneficial. Recent research points out that devices are built to hook us; the brain’s dopamine system, originally meant for survival needs, now pushes us toward endless

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026LIFESTYLE

Dogs and Homes: Finding the Right Match

The idea that some dogs are simply “difficult” is misleading. A lot of the traits people find annoying—like constant barking or high energy—were once useful for jobs such as herding or guarding. When a dog that was bred to chase cattle is left alone in an apartment, its natural instincts can feel

reading time less than a minute