Symmetrical faces are typically perceived as attractive ones, science tells us. So do people look more attractive when we're drunk because we can't see symmetry so well? One group of scientists ...
Although your drunken one-night stand might not be, this new research is a 10 out of 10. A new study takes a deep dive into alcohol’s influence on how a person perceives attractiveness, otherwise ...
We all know about beer goggles. You’re at the bar whirling around on the dance floor and suddenly the crowd parts and there they are: THE MOST ATTRACTIVE PERSON EVER, except they’re not. Bam, beer ...
Stand-up comedians Nikki Glaser and Al Madrigal are known for their razor-sharp wit, but this week's Barmageddon game "Drunken Axe Hole" proves once and for all that pretty much any metal weapon is ...
There must be something in the water cooler. Crushing on your colleague can be a many splendid thing. The dopamine rush that spikes when you bump into one another at the copy machine. The flirty ...
In a recent study published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, researchers examined the impact of real-world alcoholism on judgments of facial attractivity and symmetry across a single set of face ...
At one point or another, our political, moral and cultural leaders have all become concerned with the beer goggle effect. Former President George Bush referred to it in his inimitable fashion as “the ...
If you thought blurry eyes were to blame for the “beer goggles” phenomenon, think again. Scientists from the University of Portsmouth have tested the popular theory that people are more likely to find ...
For the first time, scientists have proven that "beer goggles" are real — other people really do look more attractive to us if we have been drinking. Surprisingly, the beer goggles effect was not ...
For a phenomenon that is so deeply engrained in the public consciousness, the scientific evidence regarding what has been called “beer goggles” is surprisingly inconsistent. The term refers to finding ...
In the heart of the nation's capital, in a courthouse of the U.S. government, one man will stop at nothing to keep his honor, and one will stop at nothing to find the truth.
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