Small Fraction of Pilots Suffer Suicidal Thoughts
In an anonymous online survey, about 4 percent of surveyed pilots admitted to having suicidal thoughts within the last few weeks. Christopher Intagliata reports.
In an anonymous online survey, about 4 percent of surveyed pilots admitted to having suicidal thoughts within the last few weeks. Christopher Intagliata reports.
Researchers are trying to determine if chemicals used to knock out young children during surgery can have long-term repercussions on memory and development
This week, Savvy Psychologist Dr. Ellen Hendriksen explains what anxiety sensitivity is and offers three tips to take it down
Antidepressants were most common, followed by anxiety relievers and antipsychotics
A study of white female nurses found those who were more optimistic were a third less likely to die of any cause
For many people with depression, serious exercise may be the best, cheapest and safest treatment
A look inside the January/February issue of Scientific American Mind
Before, on and after Christmas suicide rates are lowest of the year—but New Year’s Day sees a spike
Johns Hopkins clinical pharmacologist Roland Griffiths talks about a major new study hinting at psychedelic drugs as therapeutic powerhouses
This week, Savvy Psychologist Dr. Ellen Hendriksen covers fear of driving and how to kick it to the curb
College is often billed as the best four years of your life, but for many students this couldn’t be further from the truth
The bittersweet emotion increases feelings of vitality
As psychiatric disorders become attributable to specific, testable causes, will psychiatry become obsolete?
The male and female responses to stress are biologically different. What does that mean for treating PTSD, depression and other disorders?
Two beliefs that put you at risk for depression, and how to rethink them
A leader of the recently announced effort describes its goal of helping the world’s aging population find desperately needed treatments for psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases...
In the wake of the election a psychologist offers solace to those feeling shock, grief or dread
When your first choice is unavailable, you may be more satisfied with something completely different
This week, Savvy Psychologist Dr. Ellen Hendriksen answers, “What is mindfulness?” Plus, 3 starter exercises to try
New NIMH chief Joshua Gordon says he will focus on quick wins, brain circuits and mathematical rigor
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