Stephen Johnson

Stephen Johnson

Executive Editor, Big Think

A man with short dark hair wearing a dark button-up shirt poses against a plain black background.

Stephen Johnson is Executive Editor at Big Think. His writing has appeared in PBS, U.S. News & World Report, and newspapers and magazines across the Midwest. He lives in St. Louis.

Flies are in no way smart, but they experience time in an almost Matrix-like fashion.
Pain makes sense from an evolutionary perspective. What's puzzling is why so many of us choose to seek out painful experiences.
John Templeton Foundation
The American author said he attempted to bring scientific thinking to literary criticism, but received "very little gratitude for this."
cgi
Technologically, the answer is definitely no. But that doesn't mean CGI is always used to good effect.
financial bullshit
"A cheap loan is beyond all new destiny." Does that mean anything to you?
A small percentage of people who consume psychedelics experience strange lingering effects, sometimes years after they took the drug.
Turing test
A computer that could decidedly pass Alan Turing's test would represent a major step toward artificial general intelligence.
choking under pressure
Choking under pressure seems to have deep evolutionary roots.
microdosing psilocybin
Ingesting tiny doses of hallucinogens might not have the outsized benefits that some people claim it does.
out of africa
A new analysis of an ancient hominin fossil sheds light on the "Out of Africa" dispersal events that occurred more than one million years ago.
gender equality paradox
Iceland consistently ranks as the most gender-equal nation. It is also the nation where men and women are most likely to pursue sex-typical jobs.
brain development age
Neuroscience research suggests it might be time to rethink our ideas about when exactly a child becomes an adult.
havana syndrome
Some U.S. intelligence operatives have suggested foreign adversaries may be using "directed-energy" weapons against Americans.
Certain types of dogs seem to be more discerning than others, however.
progression bias
We seem to have a "progression bias" that nudges us toward pro-relationship decisions and away from breaking up.
popular baby names
Humans seemingly have opposing desires to fit in and to be unique. The interplay between these might drive the evolution of fads.
depression paradox
Treatments for depression have significantly improved since the 1980s. So why isn't the rate of depression decreasing?
A placebo-controlled study found that oxytocin seems to significantly reduce romantic jealousy among people in intimate relationships.
gpt-3
GPT-3, which features 175 billion parameters, just might fool you in a conversation.
Bird drone
Drones have a lot to learn from the landing abilities of birds.