Editor’s Choice
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Why We Keep Using Old Passwords and Never Switch Banks: The Status Quo Trap
For fifty years, Delhi Public School had followed the same daily schedule: school started at 7:30 AM, with eight 40-minute…
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Why Everyone Claims to Exercise Daily But Gym Memberships Go Unused: The Social Desirability Bias
During a Class 10 health awareness program, students at Mumbai’s St. Francis School were given an anonymous survey about their…
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Why Managers Hire People Weaker Than Themselves: The Social Comparison Bias
I’ll create an engaging article on social comparison bias suitable for Class 10 students. Let me craft this with storytelling,…
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Why Doctors Rejected the Man Who Discovered That Handwashing Saves Lives
In 1847, a young Hungarian doctor named Ignaz Semmelweis was working at Vienna General Hospital when he noticed something disturbing.…
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Why Some People Misread Friendly Smiles as Romantic Interest: Understanding Perception Gaps
During the annual school cultural festival, seventeen-year-old Rohan noticed Priya smiling at him several times during the dance performance. She’d…
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Why Two People Can Watch the Same Event and See Completely Different Things
After the final whistle of the Delhi versus Mumbai school football championship, something strange happened. Both teams’ supporters were absolutely…
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Why Seatbelts Make Some Drivers Drive Faster: The Peltzman Effect Paradox
In the 1970s, professional hockey leagues made helmets mandatory for all players, expecting a dramatic reduction in head injuries. Coaches,…
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Why “If It Rhymes, It’s True” Tricks Our Brains: The Rhyme as Reason Effect
During a Class 10 debate competition at Mumbai’s St. Xavier’s School, two students presented opposing arguments about whether schools should…
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Why You Think You Can Resist Temptation Better Than You Actually Can: The Restraint Bias
Sixteen-year-old Priya woke up on Monday morning with firm resolve. “Today I start my diet,” she announced to her family.…
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Why We Think the Rich Will Get Richer and the Poor Will Get Poorer: Understanding Regressive Bias
Seventeen-year-old Aditya loved cricket statistics. After every match, he’d predict how players would perform in the next game. His pattern…
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Why “New” Slang Words Have Actually Existed for Decades: The Recency Illusion
Mrs. Kapoor, an English teacher with twenty-five years of experience, was correcting essays when she came across a student using…
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Why Good Ideas Suddenly Seem Bad When They Come From People We Don’t Like
During the Class 10 student council elections at Delhi Public School, two candidates—Aditya and Rohan—were competing for class president. They’d…
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Why Being Told “Don’t Do That” Makes You Want to Do It Even More: Understanding Reactance
Fifteen-year-old Priya had never cared much about her older brother’s room. For years, she’d walked past it without a second…
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Why We Play It Safe With Gains But Gamble to Avoid Losses: The Pseudocertainty Effect
Seventeen-year-old Rahul faced two scholarship offers for his college education. The first scholarship was guaranteed: ₹2 lakh per year, confirmed…
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Two verdicts in two days: How American courts are rewriting the rules for Big Tech and children
Within 48 hours, the legal landscape governing social media and children shifted in ways that will take years to fully…
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