Competing Narratives, Fog of War Make Truth on Hormuz Scarce ...
Black men keep showing up in democracy, but media and politics misread their role—fueling disillusionment and opening space ...
Professor E. S. Dandaura's inaugural lecture at Nasarawa State University, Keffi (delivered on April 15, 2026), offers an ...
Every day, it feels like we wake up one step closer to an apocalypse. We are bombarded with countless headlines about ...
Maria Giménez Cavallo and Jo Ann Cavallo explore the fraught relationship between the media, marketing, and government, and the complex implications for truth, power, and propaganda.
The same brain cells activate when you see something and when you imagine it, helping explain why mental images can feel so ...
Former AEI scholar and Bush administration advisor David Wurmser said during an appearance on NTD News --an anti-communist ...
How does the brain create mental images? A new study reveals that visual imagination and perception share a common neural code.
Why can images of things we have seen seem so real when we later recall them from memory? A new study led by Cedars-Sinai ...
Normal dissociative processes aid us in imaginative creativity, but they also promote cognitive error—in criminal justice, the sciences, and our everyday lives.
Researchers believe that our repetitive thought patterns can lead to negative fixations, but psychedelics could break the cycle. This could be because psychedelics make neurons fire in a more random, ...
The concerns about private credit largely center around non-banks making direct loans. One reason the sector has come under scrutiny is that it lends heavily to the beaten-down software sector. Some ...