This is one of those stories that will not go away, and a recent NYT article is fresh evidence of that. The title is: An ...
Passive investing may be raising systemic risk via concentration, leverage, and ETF feedback loops. Click to read more.
A long-lost poetry book, a forbidden love, and a classics scholar's quest to round out the censored story of a Victorian "man ...
The slogan coined by Housing Secretary Steve Reed 'won't be uttered once' under a Burnham premiership - as the future of ...
Why go to the Legislation and Judiciary Committee again for the second half of the parliamentary term? To complete ...
Nigerian political actors have developed increasingly sophisticated yet deeply troubling methods for organising party ...
Celiac disease is a lifelong medical condition observed in genetically susceptible individuals. Symptoms and complications occur in response to the ingestion of the gluten protein found in wheat and ...
BCG’s article in HBR “The False Alignment Trap” exemplifies deeper flaws in management thinking, consulting advice & business ...
How can you have a proof without proving anything? Mathematicians found a way and, in the process, came to blows over it – ...
If you want to hit your target, you need three things: a gun, a target and a method by which to hit that target with that gun ...
Why is Alito so angry when he keeps winning? A new biography traces the justice’s grievance from Princeton and Yale to the Supreme Court.
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A famed police interrogation technique led to infamous false confessions in Nebraska. We still use it.
A body of research now suggests that the Reid Technique, first popularized when used in a 1955 Lincoln homicide investigation, can prompt false confessions from suspects.
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