
How Humility Can Restore Trust in Expertise
Acknowledging the limits of one’s own knowledge could be as important a signal of expertise as credentials and confidence

How Humility Can Restore Trust in Expertise
Acknowledging the limits of one’s own knowledge could be as important a signal of expertise as credentials and confidence

To Make Better Choices, Understand How Your Brain Processes Values
The brain weighs factors based on their importance to oneself and one’s social world as part of a complex calculation that shapes behavior

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Contributors to Scientific American’s July/August 2025 Issue
Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories

Seeking Sustainable Fashion and Cracking a Greenland Mystery
Inside this double issue of SciAm, you’ll find black holes that burp up their stellar meals, metal detectorists that hit pay dirt, hope for psychopathy, the truth about testosterone and a consumer guide to sustainable clothes shopping

Readers Respond to the March 2025 Issue
Letters to the editors for the March 2025 issue of Scientific American

Behind the Scenes on the Science of The Last of Us
Behavioral ecologist David Hughes, who consulted on the video game that inspired the hit TV show The Last of Us, speaks about how our experience with the COVID pandemic changed the way we relate to zombie fiction

The Applause for Jaws despite Flaws
Fifty years ago the movie Jaws scared beachgoers and demonized sharks. Now, however, the public is evolving a better understanding

Scientific Strategies to Help Kids Meet the Challenges of a Cruel World
Research has shown ways parents can help children cope with the stressors of modern life

Contributors to Scientific American’s June 2025 Issue
Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories

Healing Rays and Universe-Destroying Quantum Bubbles
The June 2025 issue of Scientific American is packed with exciting features, from magnificent mitochondria and a plan to refreeze the Arctic to the universe’s first light and recent human evolution

Readers Respond to the February 2025 Issue
Letters to the editors for the February 2025 issue of Scientific American

How Nostalgia Keeps Friendships Alive
The social and psychological consequences of yearning for the past are starting to come into focus