Discover Renzo Piano's transformative vision for Montparnasse, reshaping the commercial complex into a pedestrian-friendly ...
Returning home from Gurugram, 27-year-old Yuvraj Mehta met with the accident around 12.15 am on January 17 when his car broke ...
When I first started writing a book earlier this year about why millennial women have been uniquely screwed over by society’s body image ideals, I used the past tense a little too confidently. We’d ...
Teenagers who are unhappy with their bodies are more likely to develop symptoms of eating disorders and depression in early adulthood, according to a new study led by University College London (UCL) ...
Delaney Thibodeau and Sasha Gollish do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant ...
“It was hard because when I was playing in the beginning, my body was different,” the tennis star said Emmanuel Sanchez Monsalve/ PORTER / NET-A-PORTER.COM Serena Williams said she struggled in the ...
Commercial availability expanded across Europe and the United States Real-time AI-enabled 3D device visualization powered by light instead of X-ray, improving navigation in complex endovascular ...
Social media usage among teens is more prevalent than ever before. In recent years, researchers have begun investigating how much social media affects teen weight concerns and body image issues. A new ...
The cover of "My One-Of-A-Kind Body." (Courtesy of KP Publicity) In an age of AI models and TikTok influencers, how can tweens and young teens maintain a healthy perspective on issues like body image ...
A study led by Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M) has determined that the size and composition of our social support networks directly influence how we perceive our body image. The findings could ...
Reverse body dysmorphia is not a clinical diagnosis but a term that originated from TikTok. People use it colloquially to describe having a perception of their own appearance as “better” than it is.
Americans think negatively about their bodies four times a day — and it’s quietly reshaping their lives. That’s according to a new survey conducted by Talker Research on behalf of Eden Health, which ...