When the brain doesn't know what to expect we perceive pain to be worse, a new study shows. The study may help shape more effective ways to manage pain in the future.
Don't even think of continuing to read this story without an ice cold Steve-wiser in your hand. It's 3:16 Day, after all, and 'Stone Cold Said So!' 'You would ...
NY businesses and consumers are already paying a price for the president's misguided tax on goods imported from Canada. The ...
The comedian is a therapeutic work in progress. The process, however, is not free of contradictions. Nor is it going very ...
As politicians weaponize language, faith in essential institutions dwindles, leaving vulnerable citizens at risk, writes ...
Decades before an Army helicopter and American Airlines jet collided, another crash took place in those same waters. Jonathan ...
Among the many things that bound the two siblings together was the 1986 Jim Jarmusch movie “Down by Law.” Its tragicomic ...
Since her father was diagnosed with cancer in 2019, Emily Bhatnagar estimates that she has donated more than 25,000 books to children’s hospitals, hoping to make things brighter for people going throu ...
The blaze began during a concert when young clubgoers used pyrotechnics that caused the roof to catch fire, according to ...
But if you've recently found yourself moving from side to side and back again, it's a sign your mattress no longer suits your ...
To sum it up in a few words: You need to be inquisitive, the kind of person who gets excited about discovering new things, a ...
Duke freshman Cooper Flagg appeared to injure his left ankle after slipping under the basket and was helped to the locker ...