# Scientific research on the purpose and functions of boredom

Boredom is a ubiquitous human emotion that has only recently become the subject of rigorous neuroscientific, psychological, and anthropological inquiry. Historically dismissed as a trivial byproduct of monotonous environments or a transient complaint of the understimulated, boredom is now recognized as a distinct, highly active neural state. Rather than representing an absence of thought, boredom operates as a critical regulatory mechanism—an aversive signal generated by the brain to indicate that a current activity is not yielding sufficient cognitive or emotional returns [cite: 1, 2]. Understanding the science of boredom requires a multidisciplinary examination of its neurobiological underpinnings, its varied typologies, its cultural dependencies, and the increasingly complex role it plays in modern digital environments. 

## Clinical Definitions and Construct Boundaries

For decades, psychological frameworks treated boredom as a secondary symptom of other mood disorders or a generalized manifestation of low motivation. Contemporary research, however, delineates boredom as an independent construct with its own phenomenological and physiological markers [cite: 3, 4]. The most empirically supported definition, formulated by cognitive psychologists, characterizes boredom as "the aversive experience of wanting, but being unable, to engage in satisfying activity" [cite: 1, 5]. This definition contains a critical insight: a bored individual is intensely motivated to engage with their environment but suffers a breakdown in the attentional and regulatory mechanisms required to do so.

### Differentiation from Apathy and Depression

Establishing the clinical boundaries of boredom requires differentiating it from overlapping states such as apathy, anhedonia, and major depressive disorder [cite: 3, 6]. While these conditions share superficial similarities—such as withdrawal, negative affect, and reduced behavioral activation—their core cognitive drivers are fundamentally distinct.

Apathy is defined as a quantitative reduction in goal-directed activity, characterized by a lack of motivational drive, diminished initiative, and reduced emotional responsiveness [cite: 7, 8]. An apathetic individual lacks the desire to engage, whereas a bored individual possesses the desire but fails to execute it. Depression, and specifically the symptom of anhedonia, involves a pervasive inability to experience pleasure in activities that were previously rewarding [cite: 4, 7]. Furthermore, depression is often accompanied by internal attributions of failure, excessive guilt, and feelings of worthlessness, whereas boredom typically involves external attributions, effectively blaming the environment for a lack of adequate stimulation [cite: 1, 6]. 

| Clinical Construct | Core Characteristic | Motivational State | Attribution of Deficit |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Boredom** | Restless desire to engage combined with an inability to sustain attention. | High (frustrated desire for stimulation). | External (blaming the environment or task). |
| **Apathy** | Diminished initiative, interest, and emotional expression. | Low (absence of drive or intent). | Neutral/Internal (lack of cognitive or emotional investment). |
| **Depression (Anhedonia)** | Markedly diminished interest or pleasure in all, or almost all, activities. | Low (generalized suppression of reward seeking). | Internal (feelings of inadequacy, hopelessness, or guilt). |

Despite these distinctions, chronic boredom shares a bidirectional relationship with depressive symptoms. Prolonged boredom can lead to cycles of rumination and negative self-evaluation, which exacerbate depressive states [cite: 4, 9]. Similarly, the cognitive load associated with managing clinical depression can deplete attentional resources, increasing an individual's susceptibility to state boredom [cite: 6, 10]. Longitudinal tracking reveals that both boredom proneness and depression share characteristics such as negative affect, memory difficulties, and a perceived lack of meaning in life, yet they remain statistically and experientially separate entities [cite: 4].

### Attention Regulation and Working Memory Deficits

At its core, boredom is a pathology of attention. Cognitive models, such as the Meaning and Attention Components (MAC) model, propose that boredom arises when an individual experiences difficulty controlling their attention and using working memory effectively to process environmental stimuli [cite: 5, 11]. When attention wanes, the brain interprets the resulting cognitive friction as the aversive state of boredom. 

This attention-regulation failure explains the high comorbidity between boredom proneness and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) [cite: 12, 13]. Individuals with ADHD traits frequently exhibit deficits in executive functioning and working memory, which mediate the relationship between the disorder and chronic boredom [cite: 11]. Because these individuals struggle to marshal the sustained attention required to penetrate a task's surface complexity, they are disproportionately vulnerable to the feeling that a situation is boring, regardless of its objective characteristics [cite: 11, 12]. Research assessing parent-child interactions indicates that environmental stimulation and parental responsiveness play crucial roles in shaping a child's ability to regulate this boredom and maintain attention, with delay aversion acting as a significant mediating factor [cite: 13].

## Neurobiological Mechanisms of Boredom

The subjective experience of boredom corresponds to a highly specific and active physiological signature. Advancements in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG) have identified the precise neural networks that govern the bored brain, dispelling the myth that boredom is a state of neural quietude.

### The Default Mode Network and Executive Control

When attention networks disengage from an unstimulating external task, the brain does not power down; instead, it shifts processing to the Default Mode Network (DMN) [cite: 14, 15]. The DMN, comprising the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), precuneus, and angular gyrus, is typically associated with introspection, daydreaming, and self-referential thought [cite: 16, 17]. 

During episodes of boredom, the DMN becomes highly active [cite: 2, 15]. However, this activation occurs simultaneously with a failure to engage the Executive Control Network (ECN), which encompasses frontoparietal regions responsible for goal-directed processing and sustained attention [cite: 14, 18]. 

Data mapping brain network activity demonstrates a clear inverse relationship between these systems depending on the level of psychological engagement. In states of optimal engagement or "flow," the ECN is highly active while core DMN regions associated with self-referential thought are suppressed [cite: 17, 18, 19]. In boredom, this relationship fractures. The DMN dominates, driving profound introspection and mind-wandering, while the ECN disengages. This imbalance results in the individual becoming trapped in a state of restless internal rumination while remaining acutely and uncomfortably aware of their inability to lock onto an external target [cite: 2, 15, 17].

| Cognitive State | Default Mode Network (DMN) Activity | Executive Control Network (ECN) Activity | Subjective Experience |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Optimal Engagement (Flow)** | Suppressed (diminished self-referential processing). | Highly Active (sustained focus and goal direction). | Total immersion, loss of self-consciousness, distorted time perception. |
| **Boredom** | Highly Active (increased mind-wandering and rumination). | Disengaged / Suppressed (inability to sustain attention). | Restlessness, aversive self-awareness, slow time perception. |
| **Creative Synthesis** | Active (associative thought generation). | Active (goal-directed selection of ideas). | DMN-ECN coupling allowing for novel problem solving. |

### Insular Cortex Signaling and Autonomic Arousal

Another critical neurological marker of boredom lies within the anterior insular cortex. The insula acts as a hub for sensory and emotional processing and plays a major role in the brain's Salience Network, which determines which external stimuli warrant attention [cite: 15]. Functional imaging reveals that during boredom, the anterior insula exhibits anticorrelated activity with the DMN [cite: 2, 17]. This suggests a systemic failure to register environmental information as salient, leaving the individual stranded in a state of high desire but low environmental reward.

Contrary to early assumptions that boredom is strictly a low-arousal, lethargic state, psychophysiological measurements indicate a complex autonomic profile. Studies tracking heart rate, skin conductance, and cortisol levels reveal that certain manifestations of boredom are accompanied by increased sympathetic nervous system activity [cite: 20, 21]. As the individual struggles to find a satisfactory target for their attention, physiological arousal increases—manifesting as a rising heart rate, elevated cortisol, and physical restlessness, though sometimes coupled with decreased skin conductance [cite: 5, 20, 21]. This autonomic surge underscores boredom's evolutionary function: it is an internal alarm prompting the organism to abandon a sterile environment and search for more profitable cognitive or physical pursuits [cite: 21].

### Dopaminergic Pathways and Brainwave Oscillations

Individual variations in boredom susceptibility—often measured as trait "boredom proneness"—are heavily mediated by dopaminergic pathways. Dopamine is the primary neurotransmitter involved in reward-prediction and motivation [cite: 1]. Individuals who require higher thresholds of stimulation to trigger dopaminergic reward pathways are significantly more prone to chronic boredom [cite: 15]. When dopamine levels are sub-optimal, the resulting deficit creates a restless, unsatisfied feeling that drives sensation-seeking and risk-taking behaviors, such as problem gambling or substance abuse [cite: 2, 3, 12].

Electroencephalography (EEG) studies further refine this profile. The most consistent EEG finding during boredom is a widespread surge in alpha power (8-13 Hz) across the frontal and parietal regions [cite: 1]. Alpha brainwaves are associated with "cortical idling"—a state in which the brain is awake but actively disengaging from the processing of external sensory information. The intensity of alpha power directly correlates with the subjective intensity of the boredom experienced; as self-reported boredom increases, so does the generation of alpha waves [cite: 1]. Additionally, voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analyses indicate that boredom proneness is negatively correlated with grey matter volumes in the precuneus, further linking structural brain differences to attention control deficits and procrastination [cite: 22].

## Typology of Boredom States

The recognition that boredom involves both high and low arousal states led to the development of a more nuanced psychological taxonomy. Expanding on monolithic definitions, researchers Goetz, Frenzel, and colleagues utilized experience sampling methods (ESM) to identify multiple, distinct typologies of boredom based on the dimensions of arousal (ranging from calm to fidgety) and valence (ranging from slightly positive to highly aversive) [cite: 23, 24, 25, 26, 27].

### Dimensional Analysis of Arousal and Valence

Empirical sampling of high school and university students in real-time environments supports a five-type model of boredom, plotting varying states of emotional agitation against the severity of negative affect [cite: 23, 24, 25]. 

| Boredom Typology | Arousal Level | Valence (Emotional Affect) | Behavioral Presentation |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Indifferent Boredom** | Very Low (Relaxed) | Slightly Positive to Neutral | Calm, withdrawn, and indifferent to the environment. No strong desire to escape the situation. Often experienced during leisure time. |
| **Calibrating Boredom** | Slightly Low | Mildly Negative | Wandering thoughts and uncertainty. A vague desire to do something else, but lacking active search behaviors. |
| **Searching Boredom** | High (Restless) | Negative | Agitation and active pursuit of change or distraction. The individual is highly motivated to find a specific alternative activity. |
| **Reactant Boredom** | Highest (Fidgety/Aggressive) | Highly Aversive / Negative | Severe frustration, tension, and hostility. Strong motivation to escape the boring situation and avoid those responsible for it (e.g., a teacher or boss). |
| **Apathetic Boredom** | Lowest (Lethargic) | Highly Aversive / Negative | Profound lack of positive or negative affect. Feelings of helplessness, closely mirroring clinical depression. |

*Note: The Meaning and Attention Components model categorizes boredom along these dimensions to demonstrate that boredom is not a singular experience, but a spectrum ranging from restorative relaxation to acute psychological distress [cite: 23, 24, 25, 28].*

### The Clinical Risk of Apathetic Boredom

The discovery of apathetic boredom provides a crucial bridge between transient emotional states and chronic psychological distress. Comprising up to 36% of boredom experiences in sampled high school cohorts, apathetic boredom lacks the motivating, high-arousal friction of reactant or searching boredom [cite: 23, 25]. Because it is devoid of the physiological arousal required to trigger a change in environment, individuals trapped in this state cease seeking novel stimuli, mimicking the behavioral profile of learned helplessness [cite: 23, 26, 27]. 

When chronic, this type of boredom functions as a powerful precursor to depressive episodes [cite: 29, 30]. It necessitates specialized clinical interventions that address underlying attentional and emotional regulation deficits rather than merely introducing environmental novelty. Mental health professionals increasingly view chronic apathetic boredom not as a personality flaw or a lack of motivation, but as meaningful diagnostic information signaling unmet psychological needs, unprocessed emotions, or the onset of major depressive disorder [cite: 29].

## Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Boredom

Because boredom is deeply tied to the attribution of meaning, social rhythm, and the regulation of attention, it is uniquely sensitive to cultural conditioning. The assumption that boredom is a universal, uniform human experience is increasingly challenged by anthropological and cross-cultural psychological research, which demonstrates that cultural frameworks dictate both the threshold for boredom and how the emotion is appraised.

### Individualism, Collectivism, and Ideal Affect

Research measuring boredom proneness across demographics reveals significant discrepancies between Western and non-Western societies. Utilizing the Multidimensional State Boredom Scale (MSBS) and the Boredom Proneness Scale (BPS), studies demonstrate that individuals in Western, individualistic cultures (e.g., the United States, Canada, Germany) consistently report higher baseline levels of boredom proneness than individuals in Eastern, collectivist cultures (e.g., China, Japan, Hong Kong) [cite: 31, 32, 33, 34].

This variance is largely explained by cultural differences in "ideal affect"—the emotional states that a society values and encourages. Western cultures prioritize independent self-construal and place a high premium on high-arousal positive emotions, such as excitement, enthusiasm, and intense personal achievement [cite: 31, 35]. When environments fail to deliver high-arousal stimulation, individuals in these cultures quickly register a deficit, interpreting the resulting psychological space as aversive boredom. Furthermore, analytic cognitive styles dominant in the West focus on isolated objects and specific goals; when a specific goal is blocked or uninteresting, boredom ensues [cite: 36, 37].

Conversely, many East Asian cultures emphasize interdependent self-construal, social harmony, and holistic thinking [cite: 37, 38]. These societies tend to place higher cultural value on low-arousal positive states, such as calmness, stillness, and tranquility [cite: 31, 35, 38]. Dialectical traditions view the excessive pursuit of high-arousal joy as potentially disruptive to communal harmony, embracing the notion that emotions are fleeting [cite: 38]. Consequently, what a Westerner might appraise as an understimulating, boring environment, an individual from a collectivist culture may appraise as a neutral or desirable state of calm, resulting in lower reported instances of indifferent or calibrating boredom.

### Anthropological and Socioeconomic Contexts

Anthropological research further refines this understanding by examining boredom not just as an internal psychological deficit, but as a byproduct of modernity, economic structuring, and post-colonial temporalities. Sociologists and critical theorists propose that the fear of boredom is exacerbated by highly rationalized, capitalist societies that equate non-productivity with failure and commodify free time [cite: 39, 40, 41]. 

In ethnographic studies, boredom frequently emerges as a symptom of marginalization and socioeconomic disempowerment. For instance, following the fall of Communism and the 2008 financial crisis in Romania, anthropologists documented a pervasive, brutal form of boredom among the newly homeless and marginalized classes. This boredom captured a profound alienation from an urban life that increasingly unfolded through inaccessible practices of consumption [cite: 42]. Corporate entities capitalized on this societal anxiety; a notable 2010 advertising campaign by Nescafé in Romania explicitly positioned its coffee as a consumerist "spark" to defeat the terrifying pauses that lead to boredom, highlighting how deeply the fear of under-stimulation is woven into modern consumer identity [cite: 42].

Similarly, research among Australian Aboriginal populations in Yuendumu reveals that boredom in these communities is a historically specific phenomenon, arising from postcolonial disruptions to traditional socioculturally specific ways of perceiving time and engagement [cite: 39, 40]. In bureaucratic settings, anthropologists have noted that navigating "boring things"—such as complex Medicare codes, tax returns, and phone trees—acts as an essential, albeit monotonous, infrastructure that mitigates fragmented healthcare and social systems, demonstrating that what is subjectively boring is often structurally vital [cite: 43].

## Digital Media and the Alteration of Attention

The interaction between human attentional systems and modern digital media has triggered a profound shift in the epidemiology of boredom. The proliferation of smartphones, infinite-scroll platforms, and algorithmic content delivery was theoretically poised to eradicate boredom by providing immediate, low-friction access to stimulation. Paradoxically, longitudinal and experimental data reveal the exact opposite: digital media consumption is exacerbating the frequency and severity of boredom across global populations [cite: 44, 45, 46, 47].

### Smartphone Overuse and Baseline Stimulation

Longitudinal analyses spanning from 2009 to the present day track a steady, corresponding rise in both digital media penetration and self-reported boredom proneness [cite: 45]. A 2024 survey analyzing screen time habits revealed that Americans spend an average of 5 hours and 16 minutes per day on their smartphones, a 14% increase from the previous year, with Generation Z averaging over 6 hours daily [cite: 48]. Despite this constant access to entertainment, reports of chronic boredom are higher now than in previous decades [cite: 44, 45]. 

Prolonged exposure to rapid, fragmented digital content fundamentally alters an individual's baseline threshold for stimulation. Regular exposure to short-form media overstimulates dopaminergic reward pathways, elevating the level of engagement required to capture the brain's interest [cite: 44, 49, 50]. Consequently, the brain registers standard, real-world activities—such as studying, reading long-form text, or engaging in offline conversations—as insufficiently stimulating, immediately triggering the aversive boredom signal [cite: 46, 49]. The frequency of task-switching during media use has nearly doubled in the last decade, correlating with an 11% decrease in working memory efficiency and severe attention fragmentation [cite: 50].

### Digital Switching and the Escalation of Boredom

A primary behavioral response to the onset of boredom in the modern era is "digital switching"—the act of fast-forwarding, skipping, or toggling between short-form media content to find optimal stimulation. A robust 2024 study published in the *Journal of Experimental Psychology: General*, involving over 1,200 participants, demonstrated that individuals who switched between videos or watched fragmented snippets reported significantly higher levels of boredom than those who were forced to watch a single video in its entirety [cite: 51]. 

The mechanism behind this phenomenon lies in cognitive load, attention division, and meaning-making. Digital switching fractures attention, preventing the viewer from engaging deeply enough with the content to derive narrative meaning or satisfaction [cite: 47, 51]. As attention becomes increasingly divided, the executive control network cannot establish a state of flow, leaving the default mode network active and the brain in a perpetual state of searching [cite: 14, 18, 47]. 

Researchers define this as a bidirectional relationship: individuals use smartphones to cope with boredom, but the resulting attentional fragmentation and high-arousal baseline make them more susceptible to chronic boredom in the future [cite: 45]. The behavior intended to alleviate boredom actually engineers it, creating a feedback loop where the individual consumes more media but feels increasingly hollow, restless, and disengaged.

## The Functional Utility of Boredom

Given its association with inattention, depressive symptoms, and behavioral impulsivity, the modern reflex is to eliminate boredom entirely. However, neuroscientific and psychological consensus indicates that eradicating boredom is a profound mistake. Boredom is an evolved, adaptive mechanism that serves highly functional purposes regarding creativity, self-regulation, and meaning-making [cite: 41, 52].

### Mind-Wandering and Creative Synthesis

When boredom sets in and the Default Mode Network takes over, the brain is not idle; it is engaged in associative processing. Laboratory experiments demonstrate that individuals subjected to a tedious, boring task prior to a creative assessment frequently score higher on metrics of divergent thinking, fluency, and creative elaboration than those who engaged in stimulating activities [cite: 15, 53, 54]. 

Boredom relaxes the cognitive filters typically enforced by the Executive Control Network. This reduction in goal-directed constraint allows the brain to connect disparate ideas, engage in autobiographical planning, and synthesize novel solutions without the pressure of immediate external demands [cite: 15, 54]. Recent neuroimaging confirms that during highly creative flow states triggered by open-ended or under-stimulating environments, the brain exhibits unique DMN-ECN coupling, allowing introspective idea generation to cooperate with executive goal-directed processing [cite: 17]. 

Furthermore, educational psychology studies examining the boredom-creativity link in mathematics classrooms found that when students experience boredom combined with being *underchallenged* (as opposed to overchallenged), mathematical creativity is significantly enhanced [cite: 55, 56]. Creative individuals, in particular, show a marked ability to utilize the cognitive void of boredom, shifting easily into associative thought and experiencing idle time as a productive, exploratory state rather than a punitive one [cite: 57]. 

### The Risk of Eradicating Cognitive Void Space

The relentless elimination of boredom via continuous digital stimulation deprives the brain of the necessary downtime required for cognitive restoration and introspection [cite: 14, 58]. Boredom is the psychological catalyst that prompts individuals to evaluate whether their current pursuits align with their long-term goals and values. It is the necessary friction that initiates change. 

When boredom is perpetually bypassed through low-effort digital consumption, individuals avoid the self-reflection required to instigate meaningful behavioral adjustments [cite: 29, 58]. Furthermore, the loss of this quiet mental space drives the brain to seek increasingly intense, high-arousal stimuli to feel engaged. Without the tolerance for low-arousal states, this dynamic manifests as a societal drift toward overstimulation, underfulfillment, and a propensity for outrage and extreme behaviors [cite: 51, 59]. 

Ultimately, the science of boredom reveals that it is not a deficit to be cured, but a vital sensory capacity. It signals that an individual's cognitive and temporal resources are being misallocated. To permanently silence this signal through constant external distraction is to risk severing the internal feedback loop that drives human curiosity, psychological adaptation, and creative evolution.

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39. [researchgate.net](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEVW3RJ8H_NglIlyaB4CzP046IFt9FWZ6ENgHK1pkx4HyShf2QVKB33q8tBHM_bHV3PgEozKkZ7JWoxNC3l-VYboMvgZ_usmnrki-hsu2jSr0BgKiNaZXc58hONELuOlkHBUx-RufOSO4LzkoZfpH4QNSU3bhl01NCL39KZevIKzhzKAdF1YlfJ1-qs7i7SxlHc5PX1BbGsBJDelFF6E6-_cGg06uE9iZs=)
40. [thefamiliarstrange.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEneE86Ykg9ClGv-j1mbXTh3seSAmgV4ibK1bbmuwMiqyDU5M6MwnxQ7GFu8OZjmZZqj4mcwPERSC9W0sWIhjfAUMo1Kc2kufe7CFlvvqxzEwi9_k2i79WKMoIF-O13juTbAMvmgLtuqytVNBacaa4ffu8z)
41. [boredomsociety.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH_6MRTP_Dp_YVpw-KLsHZ2TDbjqd0QfGZJtLDE7clXnXao4-AcERg8I_MPQHfEdIIM-SlwuzwPLJflePXMj-7FSpv5wP-cvNQj0D6b0i92vBKf7gfajaFZZTZbeBHywB8SUZu7mO_dUcp0el61c8LJ6LzgNlMkLHxlNCzc3FAEOWtBu8ek)
42. [culanth.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE5vT-NqYKoXbrOfb7WHoTUedPNfylZcXOO1cc59aIU7rGthIizd8ntwkDS_9v1fJy81NdmJFcRd5AlN3CmrrNvu0MiI4Km0MheIZMM0L6vUl6N39jbD-eSbNzZ5t-LVkO5PuBUhaC_hZEMnsw8o5V34Zq6jMTkybFJh-vCF9lsu4I=)
43. [medanthro.net](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHUOIzjHWpXUCu4d8_qh8ci9q3xlB15fRlSjVzJfZu3dIsB0gjzZcmWAS08keawdd9zR0UuEbNYVoiuBF9M-SzQ01HysoM0dulbZeUO6AdZdX_2zM8yA2NETy-TcfxNE49DaOqaHjnyVycWUdh2s23txL6qCh7-WcRtowk2)
44. [osf.io](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHpKdAgVYae7sytg311R14hLVo9dI6fDfYZTRAUSWPQMma8QktgHpiLg9Jjg2mX7H2oC8JrEl4BPDIVIJ2CwwxXPDi2ewbKJEhs35_EQykt9lJLne2lMSENVAMs1M0=)
45. [nih.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFtTL2rPNKCwEU5tghy5LzudOCmqGzzim94VgmWpAil5jTMXbyscC1aVgF2lebMH134hCVyuoqttMe8u469pqDz9I9A1eBHmTvfcK_irCHGD3TSWd6EsI2w6Sz4408Otnj9rrah_qeZaQ==)
46. [researchgate.net](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE0aIl09CYsCUnTGcTK2tD5HGA8q8tsEvR0S4IItVftETplVupJ2CiJefvOsSHwkEmtKGSgzbmM-6KQ40MpGmdfhysEW0GiXfQAyrhuoRwKd4QjDYGHT6ooH1ofXYw1IFObuY-hBQ8H-mTDRqiXHAkYuetbXNc1FMKQ6Lps6PthYgEL_CdMpsr51C7uLiOtjFHF-_dwHrqZT20=)
47. [psypost.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEnrp2tESVmBtyMaOEr_5vCLvut5wQozo1YJFzIZrQ6f3jSQVq0CqGtsYA1zOoaO1YC5HXL2eZAafXkGOShLFJQKkUupm9LthKkhH5lZFUSazHTq8kdPb0xCHgCMMsaMbbp4eoyqphy4hKmRIXqo6QifOBvvedwtUE3zO30Emg=)
48. [harmonyhit.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGJLZsuKL9RkITLVlVsfKrExAV3kYGJ3tYO3__zMtJKcquS8cqG8pbuqwIk6ogeQshJqcuxMrHrlOP1_4p8-RC88SEZCdBrLrK7qYvFXxBFrYsEfwCEfrXtT3lzTZMSxLOoE-zwNmMUzD943mQUQg==)
49. [scirp.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHs_oxcsiFKejr6Jsw9DrN5TEb4db0DxEyW6Dp6yO3ubeakgwXS4Peid1CncwiwyZdfzsIt6U9s2fJDqlV6xMW20Lj2ylpqYik1CxKwJoTQlPocuvBKWq79wX9s_LYS_jy-4PjmGdVaewikW4KN8RseefWo)
50. [sqmagazine.co.uk](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEiVfPeNlVwwggoAkgkR6wKTUz86FfZpR8MzkDJgWwbBUe45nlEwi_Vr_JEpAlM29caeptOzAddFPjWq2S4R7a_JrYr3-ev3T6QAVhmcDfuTz_iR_KG_QdsvkdRvXd77RMH-fg1klMeASSHQ93K8fMOk4_RvPU3)
51. [apa.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFr3nQE1b1sRSGIRcHGVMFCvnLg8mHWt_C47_X1Yccy_6b75nKFl2T2F22kSJZnWLOTc3FaXcfq6uxqDJpyFS-FIppJrCE0KPFTbV9c-8oKxafrrid5BryBCFtc1WJM072kKN1tQ4w-ahZuNs0nDfRQjgWP0tZjgkHAhw8=)
52. [philipholyman.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEpMJEN7V8cGqzgn3ivL-hL6AVEq1mV5wKilK9N_IP6fhjBBD4SjbrbcP3hPdlNgo6O_9zNZa-FjHTfUle-agl6dJFfqR3OR96srqDBHUoajlBJhWYV97uqr_bU97hQg2MuOnmq1ZJ8_9QfklDdC8oObL2I)
53. [inpact-psychologyconference.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFgYHnGdtmv_Ry_wpxHVWOIRbcwYhzDWOEU5RP4xc63KhWO2Vcw0O-Jp0VGMc5YdTMl2WBRtLvQZwel6cfgN51h1-sayUrbLxqTC3NwnRQdZmz_75Okw19BV73uDKVVjgaHYp3dTQ3Si6YkNXYw0NtYf4U5eHpPEGoehO26GY8pygyt-O3_LaBnm3k=)
54. [globalleadersinstitute.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHB29frvBMHtVnObXKGm2Fc3rDnWUl5OuAmWQft6SXZDT24NA4EH37AcwCcryas7CACOESCLhHV1C1hrwQNaRfwRMXpAkSnSUu6gzMxoCIJYqC1lup0VHjmk3KRin7ueGLagiDRa21SUxxNHsMKbuHrbvrtgb6OI1sc87Bz03WPRkmzCK7SOOsHr99balkxaBZ7e8kpwpBsMJvP9NAaYRzggU2ruXYQwl_K0o3VZmrCzQ==)
55. [mdpi.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGHRwI7N1a9VqHtRsmxmFRiXoiQbQrXDcGOW9thD7RyYdrU3nMXE8tL9tRPNXmQCQcFAYacqeOyYxkDpdkMfayUcijUWX_MGi-7z6D4Y0ZwA7BLjvE3dB8p28lY2R4=)
56. [univie.ac.at](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHyn0utKxkDMMw0ux1JsbL0ekpLhc85Ys6qkeuRwHsDvCkJEMLS4KrodNB3IjvF_pYsHhHRzNdWgyBDS7TkqQOjjkMzA_AGTawH_X8fYYK-29OrHl7xkg2bCCeuChOhSJIC6jJnAizuQ6VC5F2MaGVyhpomSUBPhVKPQUzTeDebq4v5UiXbDEv6q7JVzll0Za_6LytEaa7h9HMZVBdPQ34j58QrBUAKmYWR)
57. [scitechdaily.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEOA5g08KZ6pUUv8kCOCQ95fa7oKdUzxcBLQs_zxdE1s34SIMapZoYLTZxVlPUwdyi0sJbdTCge_r4SuQhkI85ktraT1SqyQcghOveYOmj-4ZzAiGzdjIFYLO7qE_RkhwXSutc2jjjgPhad_V54CcroL43VFtBTNxlh3SuC2ZLiQWqHFcY0UFd5fnI=)
58. [medium.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEOH5YiSIy58lW3lP7PrgnvLyj25yMGxDhXiAFS3e_R5fe1_Mg3tgl8fd_fp7KFt-8pkvz5M_JJG_XpbVkHmeUPYMg_MXpBncpGboyGdGxu-84LrDmac45IgKYCLLLc1n9ZvIiRx29YNqSLzH24-btVFkVoNuaq_yZ6pNFGelZwO9G1OprUD325aSzvX-jGJd2eY2k_txw6w1dImgPYW-mu6zyT_YUUrVRD7rqRLleaFwY=)
59. [forbes.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFfIJZ99hrZ2kLov064gZsx3S2Rs-XBOIbYJt5prGvol0CxdUjHTACN4ey__zNUOVqVLpNNErW46g0m5jGDC_q86PAP5WzjbERZDoSznd4XEkwHZEkN3OC0A5KhNXmEgPRTE5gk4ZUupsBJYPtKIZ5vI8LWW91Px1YASjMe4UyyaqvQ7xiFB2UkSc5s3yAPCfFzp4vvuEUCoTv45D_KoWj_m-1BG2t6mx78Lcg=)
