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From David Attenborough to Hannah Fry via Bryan Johnson, our TV columnist Bethan Ackerley selects her favourite science and ...
The researchers who developed the system, called Centaur, fine-tuned a large language model (LLM) using a massive set of data ...
Filmmakers and a featured staff therapist discuss a documentary by HBO, which highlighted an innovation in providing ...
Five years after a widely revered study was debunked as totally bogus, Helen Coffey asks the experts whether trust in the ...
The benefit of positivity on conserving cabbage was most pronounced among lower-income brackets. Gladstone attributed this phenomenon to the fact that higher-income individuals have more ways to save, ...
War reshapes lives, leaving stories of courage, loss, and survival. Filmmakers have made countless great war movies — but ...
If you took psychology courses in college, you probably remember the "Stanford prison experiment," which monitored the behavior of 18 students assigned to play the roles of guards or inmates in a ...
A psychological experiment that has been labelled one of the 'most unethical psychological experiments of all time' was recreated by the BBC for a programme. From Orange Is The New Black to some ...
Her search for truth uncovers a radical psychology experiment on a pair of identical twins that led to a global medical scandal. It’s 1995 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
The incident is revisited in the documentary, which juxtaposes Shue’s recollections with those of a guard, who admitted his aggression got the best of him when he hit the dark closet with a baton.
In a small room with an audience of no more than three dozen, Zimbardo showed his documentary Quiet Rage: The Stanford Prison Experiment, in advance of its release the following year.
The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth —a limited series that just premiered on the National Geographic channel and is streaming on Disney+ and Hulu—represents at least the sixth time the ...