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Editorial

Generalised Anxiety Disorder: comprehending the symptoms is key to understanding the problem

Generalised Anxiety Disorder or GAD, along with other mental illnesses, is endlessly discussed but rarely explained on a personal level. We are presented with endless statistics; told umpteen times that the stigma must be broken. But the fact is that the stigma does still remain, anxiety is still passed off by many as people simply […]

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Review Science

Are electric toothbrushes just a clever marketing ploy?

Recently I made the impromptu purchase of a highly sophisticated electric toothbrush. Although initially delighted, I started to develop a sneaking suspicion that I had been conned by the clever marketing people at Philips and even, perhaps, by the entire dental industry. Is an electric toothbrush really necessary? Is it, like so many other things […]

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TV

Mental Health & Wellbeing Week pick: The Hilarious World of Depression

The Hilarious World of Depression aims to draw mental illness into the public sphere by openly discussing it. In each episode, host John Moe invites a different comedian to talk about their own experiences with mental illness, bringing a comedic element to a sometimes dark and difficult topic. To Moe, the link between the two […]

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Editorial

The Dunbar number: re-evaluate your social life with evolutionary science

There comes a point within everybody’s time at university when you’d honestly rather sit in bed with a pizza, illegally watching a box set on BBC iPlayer, than leave the flat and be a sociable human being. The absolute freedom of university that allows you to be in your pyjamas one minute and cracking open […]

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Editorial

Why so cynical? The potential benefit of slacktivism

Slacktivism: another horrific millennial term (almost as bad in fact as ‘millennial’). The expression refers to an action that supports a cause, but with minimal effort – a recent example would be ‘checking in’ on Facebook to the Standing Rock reservation. Activity such as this has a divisive reaction. Some argue that even the smallest […]

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Culture Literature

Sir Tony Robinson: No Cunning Plan

Big news: Tony Robinson has grown a moustache, and a pretty impressive one at that. Exciting as this is, the most thrilling part of the evening is hearing his distinctive voice in real life, soothing the nerves and triggering peaceful flashbacks to whiling away an afternoon watching Time Team. Robinson first caught public attention in […]

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Features

Tackling the problem of sexual assault on campus

In October of last year, Warwick University student George Lawlor divided opinion on how sexual assault should be dealt with on campus by refusing to attend a class on sexual consent. Publishing a blog post online entitled, ‘Why I Don’t Need Consent Lessons’, Lawlor wrote that he found the invitation to the event ’a massive, […]