science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
Who Owns Your Digital Self
Denmark is preparing legislation that assigns legal ownership of identity traits to the people who carry them. This includes the face, the voice, and the physiological patterns that algorithms can duplicate with high confidence. I have examined synthetic media cases where cloned voices triggered panic inside families and where victims struggled to prove that footage circulating online was artificial. When identity becomes copyable at industrial scale, the legal system faces problems it was never built to manage.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin20 days ago in Humans
What the System Forces You to Become
The Question the System Replaces By the time a person has passed through employment law, healthcare coverage rules, unemployment insurance, disability determination, and benefit eligibility, the relevant question has already shifted without ever being stated out loud. It is no longer whether the system helped or failed them. It is whether they managed to remain legible long enough to survive it. Each institutional layer imposes requirements that appear reasonable when viewed in isolation, yet become coercive when experienced sequentially:
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast22 days ago in Humans
Living With Cognitive Fatigue? Practical Strategies for Clearer Thinking
Cognitive fatigue is the most common symptom reported after illness and brain injury. People describe walking into rooms and forgetting what they came for, reading the same paragraph several times without retaining it, or losing important information minutes after hearing it. When the brain is fatigued, it cannot process or store information as efficiently as it normally would. The encouraging news is that in many cases cognitive functioning tends to recover as fatigues improves.
By Sarah Rudebeck23 days ago in Humans
Too Young for Rectal Cancer? A Growing Number of Americans Aren’t
For years, rectal cancer carried an unspoken label. It was something that happened later. Something tied to aging, retirement, and routine screenings that began after fifty. Younger bodies, we believed, were largely spared.
By Aarsh Malik24 days ago in Humans
The Next Big Thing After ChatGPT
When ChatGPT burst into the mainstream, it felt like a turning point. Suddenly, artificial intelligence wasn’t just a background technology powering ads or recommendations—it was something you could talk to. It could write essays, explain complex ideas, help with coding, and even sound surprisingly human.
By Mind Meets Machine25 days ago in Humans










