Watching sports is good for you – thanks to its social bonding effects
Rachel K Ownsworth, Anglia Ruskin University; Annelie Harvey, Anglia Ruskin University, and Helen Keyes, Anglia Ruskin University Being a sports
Read moreRachel K Ownsworth, Anglia Ruskin University; Annelie Harvey, Anglia Ruskin University, and Helen Keyes, Anglia Ruskin University Being a sports
Read moreHazel Flight, Edge Hill University When it comes to staying healthy, diet is one of the best things you can
Read moreOrla Muldoon, University of Limerick My early TV viewing preferences were perhaps a clue that I’d make a career researching
Read moreMichael Richardson, Leiden University and Meiru Wang, Leiden University The world is becoming clogged with plastic. Particles of plastic so
Read moreDan Baumgardt, University of Bristol Science presenter and journalist Dr Michael Mosley was well known not only for his expertise,
Read moreMelanie Sloan, University of Cambridge Nightmares are unpleasant, but perfectly normal – for most. However, my colleagues and I have
Read moreDan Baumgardt, University of Bristol Navels, belly buttons, innies or outies … whatever term you use, your umbilicus may have
Read moreBradley Elliott, University of Westminster It’s a cliche of reporting on people who reach 100 years of age, or even
Read moreAdam Taylor, Lancaster University In a recent Instagram post, the actor Jameela Jamil revealed she has poor bone density, despite
Read moreDan Baumgardt, University of Bristol A friend of mine, on a recent trip to the gym, declined to use the
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