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“When things are not changing around us, we don't have to tend to them and so we don't perceive them, we don’t think about them,” says neuroscientist Tali Sharot. “And if we're not attending, ...
And everything seems a bit duller. There's a term for that phenomenon, says Tali Sharot, a cognitive neuroscientist at University College London and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ...
It's easy to stop noticing what we love about our lives. NPR's Life Kit has tips from cognitive neuroscientist Tali Sharot on how to fall back in love with life's small joys. Sometimes you have a ...
Your boss is a yeller, but by now his barking is just background noise. Here Sharot and Sunstein offer practical strategies for how to harness this reality of human nature to make our lives better.
“Habituation is a phenomenon by which we respond less and less to things that are constant, or that change very gradually,” says neuroscientist Tali Sharot, PhD. It’s the subject of a new ...
Sharot is a professor of cognitive neuroscience at University College London and MIT, and founder and director of the Affective Brain Lab. Sunstein is an American legal scholar who was the ...
Sharot is a neuroscience professor at UCL and MIT and the director of the affective brain lab. She authored several non-fiction books, most recently co-authoring Look Again. Kelly is a ...
Dr. Sharot is a neuroscience professor at University College London and M.I.T. Mr. Sunstein is a law professor at Harvard. The miraculous history of our species is peppered with dark stories of ...
Over time, what once amazed you becomes ordinary. What once seemed awful does, too. Here Sharot and Sunstein offer practical strategies for how to harness this reality of human nature to make our ...