Ordinary and universal, the act of writing changes the brain. From dashing off a heated text message to composing an op-ed, writing allows you to, at once, name your pain and create distance from it.
Researchers believe translating emotions and thoughts into words on paper is a complex mental task.
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Emily Ronay Johnston, University of California, Merced (THE CONVERSATION) Ordinary and ...
NORMAN, Okla. (KFOR) – Several students at the University of Oklahoma are speaking out after another student’s essay went viral this week for receiving a failing grade. The student at the center is an ...
No business can be successful without a solid business plan. In fact, a business plan could be the thing that makes or breaks your entrepreneurial enterprise, especially if you haven’t started a ...
How a Finnish physicist named Karl Lemström once became obsessed with recreating the aurora borealis from scratch – and may ...
An Apache girl comes of age in a traditional ceremony, possibly the last at Oak Flat before copper mining threatens to ...
The International Committee of the Red Cross warned that artificial intelligence models are making up research papers, ...
It's almost pointless to attach numbers to Alex Warren's smash single "Ordinary" because they go out of date so quickly. The ...
A little more than a year ago, on a trip to Nairobi, Kenya, some colleagues and I met a 12-year-old Masai boy named Richard Turere, who told us a fascinating story. His family raises livestock on the ...
A new $40-million exhibit, opening nine months after President Trump fired the chief archivist, uses technology to explore ...