Short cooking classes can have a long-term impact on healthy eating, a study suggests.
Doctors may be failing to spot tell-tale signs in children who are underweight, a study suggests.
BBC: Doctors 'miss' underweight children, UCL study suggests
Carrying excess weight around the abdomen is linked to an increased risk of kidney disease, a study suggests.
Many therapists recommend that their patients keep diaries, but blogging might be even better for mental health, a study suggests.
WSJ: LSD vs. Alcohol; Blogging Your Way to Mental Health; Butterfly Heat Sensors | Week in Ideas
Saltwater crocodiles enjoy catching a wave and can travel hundreds of kilometres by "surfing" on ocean currents, a study suggests.
Sexuality, political leanings and even intelligence can be gleaned from the things you choose to "like" on Facebook, a study suggests.
The songs and postcards appear to be right - a study suggests we really do like to be beside the seaside.
BBC: People really do like to be beside the seaside, study says
Obesity can lower vitamin D levels in the body, a study suggests.
It is increasingly unlikely that global warming will be kept below an increase of 2C (3.6F) above pre-industrial levels, a study suggests.
Life expectancy for people with HIV in the UK has increased by 15 years in the past decade, thanks to modern drugs and earlier treatment, a study suggests.
In fact, a recent study suggests that a majority of employers are responding to the economy by expecting employees to work longer hours than before the recession.
But a new study suggests that under some circumstances a woman's way of navigating is probably more efficient.
Culling does not effectively control the contagious cancer threatening the Tasmanian devil, a new study suggests.
Allison McCann at Buzzfeed recently wrote about a study that suggests Facebook is normalizing creepy behavior.
FORBES: Inside The Mind Of A Person Who Stalked A Female Co-Worker
The findings come as a second study suggests that depression could be an early sign of the disease.
But a new study suggests the jury is still out on video games.
As strange as it sounds, a new study suggests the answer is yes.
Some of Britain's mainline railway stations are being used by fewer than 30 people a year, a new study suggests.
Unless space debris is actively tackled, some satellite orbits will become extremely hazardous over the next 200 years, a new study suggests.
After all, a GAO study suggests the State Department is handing out passports to many Americans who have huge outstanding tax bills.
Motorcyclists over the age of 60 are three times more likely to be hospitalised after a crash than younger bikers, a US study suggests.
There is no middle ground when it comes to black holes, which tend instead to be either petite or gargantuan, a new study suggests.
Apple could scarcely be more dominant in the nascent tablet computing market, but Amazon could change that in a hurry, a new study suggests.
FORBES: Why Amazon Could Take a Bite Out of Apple's Tablet Sales
Some of the Nazca Lines, mysterious geoglyphs that span a vast swath of the rugged Peruvian desert, may have once been a labyrinth with a spiritual purpose, a new study suggests.
MSN: Peru's mysterious Nazca Lines form a labyrinth, says study
You could be hard-wired to stay calm in a stressful situation, suggests a study published in the journal, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Process.
Further, a study in Colorado suggests 62 percent of doctors changed their advice to match the U.S. guideline and 16 percent fewer women got the test.
FORBES: Breast Exams: Mammography Is Not The Only Game In Town
You might be interested to know that a recent BlessingWhite study suggests that only 33 percent of North American workers are actually engaged in their jobs.
Those who enjoy life the most are three times more likely to live a little longer than those who enjoy it the least, a study of ageing suggests.
Other interesting statistics from a recent Symantec study suggests that businesses are storing 2.2 Zettabytes of information and that data creation doubles every two years with one gigabyte of stored data creating a petabyte of transient data.
But a study by WSL Strategic Retail suggests that neither an Obama nor a Romney victory would have much of an impact on consumer spending patterns.
FORBES: How Obama's Re-Election Could Boost The Retail Industry
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