
Food noise: why thoughts about eating aren’t always something to be feared
Strategies to reduce harmful thoughts about food that are persistent, intrusive and distressing can help people better cope with “food noise.”
Independent Analysis and Reportage

Strategies to reduce harmful thoughts about food that are persistent, intrusive and distressing can help people better cope with “food noise.”

Solutions for food systems exist; scaling them is where the challenge lies.

Detailed data is useful for understanding and addressing environmental effects on people’s lives in ways that become difficult or impossible if only the broadest and blurriest picture is developed.

William Tyndale’s translation, published in 1526, was based on a then-radical idea: Anyone should be able to read the Bible in their own language.

Muslims were woven into both America’s founding population and its labor force, writes a scholar of Islam on the nation’s 250th anniversary.

Geofencing warrants, which round up the location data of everyone in a specific place at a specific time, are now legally subject to Fourth Amendment protections.

The American Revolution was won not just by ideals and armies, but by the strategic trade networks of a small Caribbean port.

The World Cup is bringing visitors and AI-driven surveillance systems, but only one of those is certain to leave when the games are done.

Sixteen stadiums, spread across three countries are staging matches in environments that differ dramatically.

It isn’t clear that these bases are the answer to providing inclusive education for children and young people with special educational needs and disabilities.

South Africa is struggling to move to renewable energy because of: Eskom’s dominance, weak planning, a poor grid, failing municipal networks and unused solar.

The blonde archetype Monroe represented in the 1950s continues to evolve and expand as an ever-fascinating part of pop culture.