Whether you're pacing while on the phone or wandering around a park, chances are you're unconsciously turning in the same ...
The effect transcends factors like culture, gender and handedness, causing the scientists, who were initially studying social distancing behavior, to scratch their heads ...
Crowds work in mysterious ways, sometimes behaving more like a hive-minded superorganism than a collection of individuals. When viewed from above and afar, patterns emerge and large groups of people ...
A recent study suggests that people have an innate tendency to walk counterclockwise, rather than the other way around.
Science has now confirmed it; we prefer to move in a counterclockwise direction. Two researchers, Dr Iñaki Echeverría Huarte ...