NEW YORK – What makes really smart people tick? Why do some end up earning so much more than others? And how much do these disparate outcomes have to do with their personalities? A new study by Miriam Gensowski, at the University of Copenhagen, sheds fascinating light on these and other questions. Gensowski revisits a data set from all schools in California, grades one through eight, in 1921 and 1922,
This Harvard Researcher Studied How to Slow Aging for 20 Years. He's Made These 3 Changes to His Own Routine
Expert advice seems to change at a blistering pace, but if you want to know which findings are definitive enough to follow in your own life, you could do a lot worse than asking David Sinclair. He’s been studying how to slow aging at Harvard since 1999 and is a top expert in the field of longevity research. He’s also founded several biotechnology companies. If you want to know how to
The Joy of Journaling
Making Creativity a Habit. I have kept a sketchbook, journal or notebook in one form or another for most of my life. Sometimes used just as a to-do list but often to get ideas out of my head and onto paper, where I can review it later. For those of you who would like this in graphic form you can download my sketch here. I recently re-discovered Julia Camerons’