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Articles by Phys Org

Politics

New VRscores database maps workplace politics across 530,000 US employers

Researchers, including Professor of Management and Organization Reuben Hurst at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, have produced VRscores, an unprecedented public database for understanding the partisan lean of different employers […]

Business

Why cheaper power alone isn’t enough to end energy poverty in summer

Australia is an energy superpower. We have abundant natural resources, high average incomes and one of the highest per-capita rates of rooftop solar uptake in the world.This article is brought to you by Phys.Org.

Business

How to close the justice gap: What a health-linked legal model showed in three years

A three-year study has found that legal services work best when they are designed with communities, delivered face-to-face and closely linked to health and well-being, offering important lessons for improving access to justice in the […]

Society

Thinking of AI-written vows? A study explains why it can backfire

Psychologists at the University of Kent are suggesting people think wisely about their use of ChatGPT this Valentine’s Day after new research has revealed that we judge people most when they use AI to write […]

Society

New study reveals people judge lines by what’s ahead—not how long they wait

Conventional wisdom is that waiting in a queue online or in a physical line involves a certain cost for people and organizations. Rational analysis has largely based its queue management predictions on remaining wait time, […]

Business

Philadelphia communities help AI machine learning get better at spotting gentrification

Over the last several decades, urban planners and municipalities have sought to identify and better manage the socioeconomic dynamics associated with rapid development in established neighborhoods. The term “gentrification” has been lingua franca for generations […]

Education

Study finds numbing the mouth may speed up silent reading

Parents often tell their children to sound out the words as they are learning to read. It makes sense: Since they already know how to speak, the sound of a word might serve as a […]

Business

People use enjoyment, not time spent, to measure goal progress, study suggests

It stands to reason that the longer or more diligently you work at something, the better you get at it. But researchers from the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business found that consumers don’t necessarily […]

Society

Study links daily mental sharpness to 30 to 40 extra minutes of work

A new U of T Scarborough study finds that being mentally sharp can translate into a productivity boost equivalent to about 40 extra minutes of work each day.This article is brought to you by Phys.Org.

Education

New AI model enables native speakers and foreign learners to read undiacritized Arabic texts with greater fluency

Reading an Arabic newspaper, a book, or academic prose fluently, whether digital or in print, remains challenging for many native speakers, let alone learners of Arabic as a foreign language.This article is brought to you […]

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Bell-bottoms today, miniskirts tomorrow: Math reveals fashion’s 20-year cycle

Australia doesn’t have a youth crime problem—it has a youth justice problem

Researcher finds that telling the truth is correlated with better criminal justice outcomes

Half of Native Hawaiian University of Hawaiʻi students experience period poverty, study reveals

Phone or affection: Study explores effect of phubbing on relationships

Musicologists map medieval chant tropes to 9th-century political borders

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