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#Education

Articles tagged with "Education" - explore health, wellness, and travel insights.

1,835 articles
6 min read

Why the Value of Computer Science Degrees Is Being Rethought in the Age of AI

news computer science

As the tech world races forward with rapid advancements in artificial intelligence and automation, a new debate is surfacing across universities and boardrooms alike: Is a traditional computer science degree still the golden ticket to a successful technology career? Provocative arguments, such as those laid out in the article “12 reasons to ignore computer science degrees” from CIO (cio.com), are capturing global attention—echoing anxieties and optimism found throughout today’s technology sector.

#ComputerScience #Education #AI +7 more
6 min read

As AI and No-Code Tools Rise, Is a Computer Science Degree Still Relevant?

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The technology job market has always valued practical skills, but new research and expert commentary are now challenging the long-standing dominance of computer science (CS) degrees for programming jobs. A recent article published by CIO, “12 reasons to ignore computer science degrees,” argues that shifts in industry needs and the explosive growth of AI and no-code tools are quickly eroding the value of traditional CS education, sparking debate among tech leaders and educators worldwide. As companies in Thailand continue to expand their digital ambitions, the question of whether a CS degree remains necessary has become increasingly urgent for students, parents, and employers across the kingdom.

#computerscience #technology #AI +6 more
3 min read

Early Childhood Emotional Skills Predict Teen Anxiety and Depression, New Study Finds

news psychology

A large UK study shows that children who struggle to regulate their emotions by age seven are far more likely to experience anxiety and depression as teenagers. Following nearly 19,000 children for over a decade, researchers link early emotional challenges to later mental health risks, underscoring the need for early support in emotional regulation. This finding resonates with Thai families and teachers as youth mental health becomes a growing public concern, with research pointing to similar trends in Thailand.

#mentalhealth #childdevelopment #adolescenthealth +6 more
6 min read

Early Emotional Struggles in Childhood Strongly Predict Teen Anxiety and Depression, Landmark Study Finds

news psychology

A new study published by the University of Edinburgh has found that children who have trouble managing their emotions as early as age seven are significantly more likely to suffer from anxiety and depression as teenagers, illuminating a crucial early link in mental health development. By following nearly 19,000 young people over more than a decade, this research highlights the urgent need for emotional regulation support in early childhood—a message with increasing significance for Thai families and educators as youth mental health becomes an ever-more pressing public health concern (Neuroscience News).

#mentalhealth #childdevelopment #adolescenthealth +6 more
4 min read

Is a Computer Science Degree Still Worth It in Thailand’s AI Era?

news computer science

The tech job market has long rewarded practical skills, but new research and expert commentary are challenging the dominance of traditional computer science (CS) degrees for programming roles. A CIO article argues that shifts in industry needs and the rise of AI and no-code tools are eroding the value of conventional CS education. As Thai organizations expand their digital ambitions, students, parents, and employers across the kingdom are asking: is a CS degree still necessary?

#computerscience #technology #ai +6 more
4 min read

Music Reshapes the Brain in Real Time, Pioneering Study Finds

news neuroscience

Listening to music does more than soothe the soul—it actively transforms the way our brain functions on the spot, according to groundbreaking new research from European neuroscientists. The study, released on June 17, 2025, and recently highlighted by Futura Sciences, unveils how musical experiences instantly rewire neural networks, opening new opportunities in education, therapy, and cognitive science across the globe—including Thailand.

Scientists from Aarhus University in Denmark and Oxford University in the UK have developed FREQ-NESS, a cutting-edge neuroimaging technology that allows researchers to track and visualize the brain’s responses to external stimuli, such as music, in unprecedented real time. Unlike traditional techniques that assign fixed brain wave patterns (like alpha or beta) to specific regions, FREQ-NESS follows how neural circuits interconnect and adapt dynamically as we listen to music. Each musical note or rhythm generates unique electrical signals in the brain, activating and synchronizing various regions moment-to-moment.

#MusicTherapy #BrainResearch #Neuroimaging +5 more
3 min read

Real-Time Brain Mapping: How Music Shapes Our Minds—Now with Thai Context

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A new study from European researchers shows that listening to music can rewire the brain in real time. The findings, released on June 17, 2025, reveal that neural networks adapt instantly as music plays, opening doors for advances in education, therapy, and cognitive science—relevant to Thai audiences as well.

Researchers from Aarhus University and Oxford University developed FREQ-NESS, a pioneering neuroimaging technology. It tracks how the brain responds to music in real time, moving beyond traditional methods that assign fixed brain-wave categories to specific regions. FREQ-NESS monitors dynamic connections between neural circuits, capturing moment-to-moment changes as rhythms and melodies unfold.

#musictherapy #brainresearch #neuroimaging +5 more
6 min read

Summer 2025: As Internet Burnout Peaks, Experts Urge Thais to Disconnect and Reconnect with the Real World

news technology

A sweeping wave of digital fatigue and internet burnout has set the tone for summer 2025, as online life feels more overwhelming and less enjoyable than ever before, pushing millions worldwide—and in Thailand—to seek solace offline. Recent essays and fresh research highlight not only a cultural turning point but a crucial mental health inflection: the internet as we knew it is over, and going outside is the new imperative for personal and collective well-being (Slate).

#InternetCulture #MentalHealth #DigitalBurnout +8 more
6 min read

Thai Publishers at Risk as Users Ignore AI Chatbot Source Links, Cloudflare CEO Warns

news artificial intelligence

A new warning from one of the world’s leading internet security executives signals growing trouble for publishers in Thailand and across the globe: users are increasingly trusting AI-generated answers and rarely click through to source links, threatening the sustainability of traditional news and information platforms (Engadget).

Cloudflare CEO, in a recent interview with Axios, paints a stark picture of the shifting digital landscape, where search traffic referrals have experienced a dramatic decline. This trend, he explains, is the result of internet users placing growing faith in AI chatbots’ responses, choosing summaries over original sources, and in the process eroding the ability of publishers to monetize their content. “Publishers are facing an existential threat,” the executive stated. The implications are not limited to the U.S. or Europe—Thailand’s publishers, bloggers, and local content creators are just as vulnerable in this rapidly evolving online ecosystem.

#AI #ThaiMedia #Publishing +7 more
2 min read

Thai Publishers Face Revenue Struggles as Readers Skim AI-Generated Answers, Cloudflare CEO Warns

news artificial intelligence

A warning from a leading internet security executive highlights growing risks for Thai publishers and global media alike. As more readers trust AI-generated answers, they click through to source links less often, threatening traditional news models and monetization. This issue extends beyond the United States and Europe to Thailand, where local publishers, bloggers, and content creators feel the effects of changing online behavior.

Cloudflare’s CEO described a shifting digital landscape marked by collapsing referral traffic. He explained that people increasingly prefer AI summaries over original sources, challenging publishers’ ability to earn revenue from ads and subscriptions. He warned that publishers face an existential threat as the online ecosystem evolves rapidly. Data cited suggests a dramatic drop in traffic to source pages, with Thailand’s media landscape no exception.

#ai #thaimedia #publishing +7 more
4 min read

Thai Pulse: Summer 2025 — When Digital Exhaustion Upsets Everyday Life, Thais Turn to Real-World Connections

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A growing wave of internet fatigue is reshaping summer 2025, with online life feeling heavier and less enjoyable. In Thailand, millions are seeking relief offline as experts urge a shift from scrolling to real-world engagement. New essays and research point to a cultural inflection: the era of constant online overload may be giving way to a “log off, reconnect” mindset that prioritizes direct human connection.

Once a hub of joy and community, the internet now often delivers floods of distressing news and competing voices. Experts describe a pervasive sense of mental fatigue and anxiety, prompting many to pursue authentic in-person experiences. The message is clear: touching grass is not just a meme but a practical step toward better well-being.

#internetculture #mentalhealth #digitalburnout +8 more
5 min read

Thai Teens Embrace ‘Fambushing’: How Location Sharing Is Redefining Family Boundaries

news parenting

A new social phenomenon known as ‘fambushing’ is sweeping across households with tech-savvy teens, raising fresh questions for Thai parents about digital boundaries and family privacy. The term describes a growing trend in which teenagers use real-time location-sharing apps to surprise—or “ambush”—their parents at restaurants, shops, or even on dates, sometimes hoping for free treats or simply a laugh. While the practice can be amusing, it is also prompting important conversations about privacy, trust, and digital etiquette in Thai families adjusting to a rapidly evolving technological landscape (Yahoo Lifestyle).

#ThaiTeens #FamilyTechnology #DigitalPrivacy +6 more
3 min read

Thai Teens’ “Fambushing” Trend: What Location Sharing Means for Thai Families

news parenting

A growing trend among tech-savvy Thai teens is redefining family boundaries: real-time location sharing used to ambush parents at restaurants, shops, or on dates. While playful in tone, the practice raises important questions about privacy, trust, and digital etiquette in Thai households adjusting to rapid technological change. Research from international sources suggests families are grappling with how much visibility is appropriate in a connected life.

In Thailand, smartphones and popular apps such as LINE, Facebook Messenger, and built-in location services are common. Thai parents may relate to stories of surprise visits at busy venues like shopping centers, sparked by a teen’s location-share alert. The availability of continuous location monitoring through tools like Life360, Find My, and other maps has made spontaneous digital encounters more feasible for Gen Z, who are generally more comfortable with technology than previous generations.

#thaiteens #familytechnology #digitalprivacy +6 more
3 min read

Addictive Screen Use, Not Total Screen Time, Tied to Higher Teen Suicide Risk, Landmark Study Finds

news mental health

A landmark study shows that teenagers who exhibit addictive patterns of using social media, mobile phones, or video games are up to three times more likely to experience suicidal thoughts or behaviors than their peers. The research, published in JAMA, tracks youths over several years to examine compulsive screen use and suicidality rather than simply total time online. This shift in focus strengthens the call for nuanced mental health strategies in a digital age.

#teenmentalhealth #digitaladdiction #suicideprevention +7 more
4 min read

AI Set to Transform the Workplace by Automating What Can Be Measured

news artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI) is poised to reshape the global workforce far more swiftly and pervasively than many once imagined, according to a new analysis by leading researchers published in the Harvard Business Review. Based on current developments in AI technology—not hypothetical future advances—the report highlights that any aspect of work that can be measured is vulnerable to automation, sparking a wave of change through both creative and traditionally “safe” professions worldwide.

#AI #Automation #FutureOfWork +7 more
6 min read

Baby Behaviors Offer Clues to Adult Intelligence, Major Study Finds

news psychology

New research suggests that the earliest moments of a baby’s life—how they babble, play, and interact—may hold modest yet meaningful clues about their intelligence well into adulthood. In a landmark study published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a team from the University of Colorado Boulder followed more than 1,000 twins from infancy to age 30, revealing that certain behaviors and environmental influences in a child’s first year can forecast cognitive abilities decades later (Neuroscience News).

#childdevelopment #earlychildhood #intelligence +4 more
3 min read

Early Childhood Cues: How Baby Behaviors Shape Adult Intelligence, New Study Shows

news psychology

New research indicates that how a baby babbles, plays, and interacts in the first year can modestly forecast cognitive abilities into adulthood. A landmark twin study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences followed 1,098 twins from infancy to age 30. It found that early-life behaviors and environments can account for about 10% to 13% of later cognitive variation, despite the many experiences that unfold over the decades.

#childdevelopment #earlychildhood #intelligence +4 more
5 min read

New Study Challenges Belief that Religious Attendance Boosts Mental Health

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A long-term study published in the journal Psychological Science has found little evidence supporting the widespread assumption that attending religious services leads to better mental health outcomes, raising questions about a relationship long thought to be positive and beneficial. The research, which analyzed nearly two decades of data from the British Household Panel Survey, revealed that frequent participation in organized religious gatherings had no clear association with improved mental well-being and, in certain instances, was followed by slightly worse symptoms.

#MentalHealth #Religion #Thailand +7 more
3 min read

Religious Attendance Isn’t a Guaranteed Boost for Mental Health, New Long-Term Study Finds

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A long-term analysis in Psychological Science questions the widely held belief that going to religious services reliably improves mental health. The study tracked nearly two decades of data from the British Household Panel Survey and found no clear link between frequent religious attendance and better mental well-being. In some cases, higher participation correlated with slightly worse mental health in following years.

Historically, many studies have suggested that religious involvement reduces depression, anxiety, and substance abuse. The proposed benefits are often attributed to social support, a sense of belonging, and coping strategies like hope and meaning-making offered by faith communities. However, new findings based on responses from over 29,000 British adults between 1991 and 2009 indicate the relationship may be more nuanced than previously thought. Researchers examined both within-person changes over time and comparisons between people with different levels of attendance to understand the true dynamics.

#mentalhealth #religion #thailand +7 more
2 min read

Thai Workforce Edge: How Measurable Tasks Are Driving AI-Driven Change

news artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence is accelerating faster than many expected, with measurable work tasks increasingly at risk of automation. A recent analysis in the Harvard Business Review shows that highly capable AI models are not only handling routine office duties but also challenging expertise across many fields. The result could be a broad shift in both creative and traditional professions worldwide, including roles in law, medicine, and academia.

For Thailand, the implications are significant. In Bangkok’s financial sector, AI-assisted tools are already streamlining risk assessment and tax work. In the creative industries, automated video editing, image manipulation, and even storytelling are gaining traction. Thailand’s strong arts and crafts tradition remains vital, but new digital competencies will be essential to stay competitive regionally and globally.

#ai #automation #futureofwork +7 more
6 min read

Addictive Online Habits in Children Linked to Worsening Mental Health, Global Research Reveals

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A wave of new research warns that children who report “addictive” behaviour patterns with their online activities—including social media, mobile phones, and video games—face significantly greater risks for mental health problems than peers who engage less compulsively. A landmark 2025 study, previously highlighted in the Financial Times, demonstrates that the danger is not simply about the total hours spent online, but rather how compulsive or addictive a young person’s engagement has become, dramatically altering the conversation around digital wellbeing and youth mental health.

#DigitalAddiction #ChildMentalHealth #ThailandYouth +6 more
6 min read

AI Brainstorming Tools May Be Making Us All Think Alike, New Research Finds

news artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence tools such as ChatGPT are renowned for their ability to generate a rapid torrent of original ideas—but new research suggests these machine-generated responses may be quietly steering humans toward conformity, raising important questions for educators, businesses, and policymakers in Thailand and around the world. Recent findings reported by multiple outlets, including a widely cited summary on Axios, reveal that while AI can help people brainstorm ideas faster and at greater volume, those ideas tend to be far too similar, limiting the diversity of creative thought.

#AI #Creativity #ChatGPT +7 more
6 min read

Childhood Trauma Leaves Lasting Imprint on Brain Structure and Links, Landmark Study Reveals

news psychology

A new neuroimaging study has found tangible differences in the brains of adults who experienced childhood trauma, identifying concrete changes in both brain structure and connectivity that may offer crucial clues for mental health care in Thailand and worldwide. The research, recently published in the journal Neuroscience, suggests that the impact of early life adversity endures well into adulthood, physically altering key regions of the brain responsible for movement, sensation, and emotional processing (PsyPost).

#childhoodtrauma #brainhealth #mentalhealth +5 more
4 min read

Compulsive Online Habits in Thai Youth Linked to Higher Mental Health Risks, Global Research Shows

news psychology

New international findings reveal that children who exhibit compulsive online behaviours—such as relentless scrolling on social media, constant phone use, and heavy video gaming—face markedly greater mental health risks than peers with less intense engagement. A landmark 2025 study, highlighted by major outlets, shows the danger lies not in total hours online but in the pattern of use: highly addictive, hard-to-stop behaviours dramatically shift youths’ wellbeing and resilience.

This is a critical issue for Thai parents, teachers, and policymakers. Thailand’s rapid digital shift means many students are online from an early age. National data indicate Thai youths use smartphones longer each day than global peers, a trend accelerated by online schooling and social networks during the pandemic. With rising reports of anxiety, depression, and troubling cases of self-harm among young people, international findings offer an urgent call to action for local communities.

#digitaladdiction #childmentalhealth #thailandyouth +6 more