Why You Should Wear the Same Thing Every Day
It turns out that this sartorial monotony is actually good for both our personal brands and our brains.
Bob Hope Left a Forgotten Dent in Comedy
A new book by Richard Zoglin about the life of Bob Hope aims to reinvigorate the legacy of the oft-overlooked comedy pioneer.
The Marijuana Revolution
While the discussion of legalization vs. decriminalization continues, the cultural impact of marijuana legalization is not up for debate.
You Make Me Feel So Young: Memory and Self-Perception of Age Are Correlated
Today's Wall Street Journal cites recent research indicating that your perception of your age may influence your cognitive functioning
On The Art of Possibility
Many books that claim to support such perspective shifts vastly oversimplify the approach and offer cliché encouragements to "think outside the box," The Art of Possibility avoids both oversimplification and cliché, adeptly guiding the reader to develop modes of thinking that can prompt such shifts.
Denter of the Week: Skip Franklin
This week’s featured Denter is Skip Franklin, co-founder of Serial Entrepreneurs Anonymous, an organization dedicated to helping future entrepreneurs.

Bringing the Sabbatical into the Business World
Executives say that these programs help to stem employee burnout and force the company to develop redundant skill sets so that no employee becomes truly indispensable.
Women Play a Major Role in Walter Isaacson's History of Computer Science
In an industry where CEO's feel free to make comments about waiting for karma to achieve pay equality with male coworkers, reminders about the role that female mathematicians had in sparking the computer revolution are sorely needed.
Using Big Data to Identify Entrepreneurs Before They Found
In the race to find the next great investment, some venture capital firms are using big data to find potential founders and innovators before they try their hand at founding a company.
The 700 Terabyte Gram of DNA
Some folks at Harvard have figured out how to write -- and read -- insanely large amounts of data in strands of DNA.