
Why Some Apologies Feel Hollow—And Others Don’t
The words we choose when apologizing—especially longer, effortful ones—can signal sincerity and make our apologies feel more authentic.
Why Some Apologies Feel Hollow—And Others Don’t
The words we choose when apologizing—especially longer, effortful ones—can signal sincerity and make our apologies feel more authentic.
Is There a Fundamental Limit to Human Metabolism? New Research Suggests Yes
Retinal Implant Allows People with Blindness to Read Again in Small Trial
Hard Sudoku: October 22, 2025
U.S. Protesters Increasingly Reject Political Violence, ‘No Kings’ Survey Finds
Brains Remember Stories Differently Based on How They Were Told
Global Superbugs Surge, Chikungunya Hits Long Island, and Satellites Leak Data
Why Aluminum in Vaccines Is Safe—And Often Essential
Announcing the #SciAmInTheWild Photography Contest Short List
One Year after Scientific American’s First Issue, the Solar System Grew by a Planet
Scientific American Celebrates 180 Years with Stories of Scientific U-turns
U.S. Science and Scientific American Have Weathered Attacks Before and Won
Create as many words as you can!
Stretch your math muscles with these puzzles.
The Brain Science of Elusive ‘Aha! Moments’
Building Intelligent Machines Helps Us Learn How Our Brain Works
Lifting the Veil on Near-Death Experiences
How the Brain ‘Constructs’ the Outside World
Global Superbugs Surge, Chikungunya Hits Long Island, and Satellites Leak Data
How a Space Rock Became a Scientific Breakthrough—And a Black Market Commodity
A Surgeon Explains the Alarming Rise of Lung Cancer in Nonsmoking Women
Nobel Prizes, COVID Vaccine Updates and Malnutrition in Gaza
Is There a Fundamental Limit to Human Metabolism? New Research Suggests Yes
A new study finds that even elite endurance athletes run up against a hard metabolic ceiling
How to Catch a Rare Comet and a Meteor Shower
A comet visible to the naked eye will make its closest approach to Earth on October 21
A Classic Graphic Reveals Nature’s Most Efficient Traveler
A famous graphic, now updated, compares locomotion in the animal kingdom
Cells Have a Crystal Trigger That Makes Them Self-Destruct When Viruses Invade
A special class of immune proteins protect us from pathogens but also drive inflammation and cell death
Which Anti-Inflammatory Supplements Actually Work?
Experts say the strongest scientific studies identify three compounds that fight disease and inflammation
Brains Remember Stories Differently Based on How They Were Told
Telling the same story in different ways can change the brain networks that the listener uses to form memories