Brigham Young University President Kevin J Worthen announced today that the Committee on Race, Equity & Belonging (CoREB) has completed its study, which included numerous meetings with students, ...
Have you felt uplifted through a simple smile, help with a task or a positive interchange with someone — even a stranger? Kindness works both ways. A new study conducted by BYU researcher Julianne ...
Generative artificial intelligence is everywhere, but not everyone is ready to embrace it — and it’s not just people who fear that AI might replace their jobs or that ChatGPT will become sentient and ...
An eye-catching new BYU study shows just how different the experience of walking home at night is for women versus men. The study, led by BYU public health professor Robbie Chaney, provides clear ...
Dear Members of the BYU Campus Community, Most of you know that in late July the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced the decision to create a medical school ...
As the United States gears up for a general election in one of the most tumultuous years in recent history, a new BYU study by sociology professor Jacob Rugh uncovers troubling new data about factors ...
New experiments in group decision making show that having a seat at the table is very different than having a voice. Scholars at Brigham Young University and Princeton examined whether women speak ...
A new BYU study shows the COVID-19 virus is not being transmitted by cash; the virus is not viable on banknotes — or really on money cards, for that matter. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, many ...
Move over trust falls and ropes courses, turns out playing video games with coworkers is the real path to better performance at the office. A new study by four BYU information systems professors found ...
The study found that robots aren’t replacing humans at the rate most people think, but people are prone to exaggerate the rate of robot takeover. It’s easy to believe that robots are stealing jobs ...
New research from BYU highlights how subtle parental preferences—based on birth order, personality, and gender—can shape sibling relationships and family dynamics. Siblings share a unique bond built ...
BYU researchers team up with the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources. Video courtesy of KSL Outdoors. Animals in the wild are often smarter than we give them credit for. This time it’s the elk.
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