Brains and BehaviorAnytime, Anywhere: Pencil and Paper Games That RockBy Garth SundemScienceDrunks More Likely to Think You're a JerkBy Ars TechnicaScienceNeanderthals Had Feelings, TooBy Brandon KeimScienceAnger Management for Online TrollsBy Charles Q. ChoiScienceIntelligent Individuals Don't Make Groups SmarterBy Brandon KeimBest. Animal Shadow Puppets. Ever.By Garth SundemHow To Draw a Totally Sweet Brain MazeBy Garth SundemScienceHow the curveball fools you: Illusion of the YearBy David DobbsScienceWhy Cellphone Talkers Are So GratingBy Bruce Bower, Science NewsScienceDepression's wiring diagramBy David DobbsScienceKill Whitey. It's the Right Thing to Do.By David DobbsScienceGamers Better at Fast Decision-MakingBy Bruce Bower, Science NewsScienceThe More Victims, the Less Severe the JudgmentBy Jess McNallyScienceIn Marc Hauser's rush to judgment, what was he missing?By David DobbsScienceClustered Networks Spread Behavior Change FasterBy Jess McNallyScienceMarc Hauser, Virginia Heffernan, & Stephen Fry — Neuron Culture's August BestBy David DobbsCultureGiant Skull Is Made of Thin Slices of BrainBy Duncan GeereScienceClean People Feel Morally SuperiorBy WIRED StaffScienceVideo: Dancing Parrot Boogies Better With a PartnerBy Lisa GrossmanScienceDo-Gooders Are Unpopular Team MembersBy WIRED StaffScienceHauser & Harvard speak; labmates & collaborators clearedBy David DobbsScienceUpdated: This Hauser thing is getting hard to watchBy David DobbsScienceStern Korean Culture Stifles Biological Predisposition to BlabBy WIRED StaffGearReverse-Engineering of Human Brain Likely by 2030, Expert PredictsBy Priya GanapatiMore Stories