New research reveals that numbers in our visual field can subtly distort how we judge spatial positions, showing that perception is shaped by both numerical magnitude and object-based processing.
With new technologies comes new discoveries. Or so Spider Man's Uncle Ben might have said if he was an astronomer. Or a scientist more generally—but in astronomy that saying is more true than many ...
Plans for a complex of 86 townhomes on Old Forty Foot Road in Towamencin are staying on the drawing board for now. Township ...
Co-occurring disorders and clinical care for complex illnesses- safe and effective use of opioids may be only one of the ...
One Sparks resident says Long COVID has led to everything from fatigue and an 85-pound weight loss to the inability to enjoy ...
Mexico’s Popocatépetl volcano has long drawn attention for its size, constant activity, and glowing plumes of smoke and ash, ...
Morocco has managed to establish itself, in twenty years, in one of the most closed industrial sectors in the world—through ...
Eva Davis, the beloved community organizer, was central to an Atlanta artist’s work on a high-rise that was once part of the ...
Professor Joongoo Kang's team from the Department of Physics and Chemistry at DGIST and Professor Sohee Jeong's team from the ...
A childhood math pattern led me to question Jung’s claim that archetypes exist beyond the mind—and to ask which patterns come ...
The Constellation Ball, as it has been named, features 5,280 circular Waterford crystals in three different sizes.