How COVID Is Changing the Study of Human Behavior
The pandemic is teaching us key lessons about how people respond to crisis and misinformation, and it is spurring changes in the way scientists study public health questions
Christie Aschwanden is a science writer in Colorado and author of Good to Go: What the Athlete in All of Us Can Learn from the Strange Science of Recovery (W. W. Norton, 2019). Credit: Nick Higgins
The pandemic is teaching us key lessons about how people respond to crisis and misinformation, and it is spurring changes in the way scientists study public health questions
Workers are anxious because the coronavirus is still infecting people. Here are ways to evaluate the safety of a shared work space
President Trump and other conspiracy fantasists touted the fake claim that COVID death counts are exaggerated. But three kinds of evidence point to more than 350,000 deaths*
Experts suggest limiting travel and keeping Thanksgiving and other celebrations small and outdoors
The new political polarization casts rivals as alien, unlikable and morally contemptible
Why proposals to largely let the virus run its course—embraced by Donald Trump’s administration and others—are a false promise
As few as 10 percent of infected people may drive a whopping 80 percent of cases in specific types of situations
The state went after the disease with widespread testing and science-based targets. Now it is in better shape than its neighbors
Despite tracing’s success in other countries, the U.S. government has failed to adequately fund or apply the tool
Support science journalism.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Knowledge awaits.
Already a subscriber? Sign in.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Create your free account or Sign in to continue.
Create Account