This research examines how AI-generated travel photography influences user engagement and visit intention. Using social media analysis, interviews, surveys, and fsQCA, it shows that emotionally immersive AI images can transform imagination into travel desire, offering destination marketers a powerful, low-cost alternative to traditional tourism promotion.

This study introduces a “brain stress test” for depression, combining targeted brain stimulation with neuroimaging. Depressed individuals show exaggerated brain responses, which increase with repeated episodes. The test may serve as an early warning signal, helping clinicians identify relapse risk and intervene before depression returns.

This neuroscience study shows that brief pre-lecture interactions significantly improve learning. Students who chatted with either a human teacher or an AI tutor before watching a video lecture performed better and showed greater brain synchrony in MRI scans. Social interaction—human or artificial—primes the brain for more effective learning.

This research explores how community enables experimental literature in Hong Kong, particularly among minority writers. Rather than representing entire groups, individual texts function like stars in a constellation. Supportive literary communities foster creativity, agency, and experimentation, reshaping how contemporary art and authorship are understood.