
-
Tears of joy as Venezuelan migrants return from Salvadoran prison 'hell'
-
Kelly hits winner as late drama takes England into Women's Euro 2025 final
-
Britain's Norrie ousts Musetti to advance at DC Open
-
Ukraine curbs anti-corruption agencies, sparking rare protests
-
Tears of joy as Venezuelan migrants return from El Salvador prison 'hell'
-
Nasdaq edges down from records ahead of big tech earnings
-
Republicans seek to rename opera house after Melania Trump
-
Hilal become dual champions after triumph in war-torn Sudan
-
Pakistan courts sentence dozens from Khan's party
-
Ozzy Osbourne: key dates
-
Ozzy: 'Prince of Darkness' and maestro of heavy metal
-
Trump claims Obama 'coup' as Epstein questions mount
-
Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne dead aged 76
-
Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne dead aged 76: family
-
Judge to rule in sexual assault case that shook Canadian hockey
-
Trump agrees to small reduction in Philippine tariffs
-
UK court awards £700 mn to HP in late tycoon's fraud case
-
Interpol lifts red notice for anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson
-
Games giant Ubisoft bets on reorganisation to dispel blues
-
Putellas and Spain eager to end Germany hoodoo in Women's Euro semi-final
-
Trump says confident US to reach Philippines trade deal
-
US Justice Department plans to interview Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell
-
Bangladesh take second T20I for first series win over Pakistan
-
Paret-Peintre lands first French Tour stage win in Mont Ventoux thriller
-
US to leave UN cultural body, citing anti-Israel bias
-
Julia Roberts, Jude Law to feature at star-packed Venice Film Festival
-
Stocks slip as investors eye tariff impact among corporate earnings
-
General Motors profits fall on tariffs
-
Extreme weather misinformation 'putting lives at risk,' study warns
-
Russia seeks to fine web users searching for content deemed 'extremist'
-
Paret-Peintre delivers Tour de France home win in Mont Ventoux thriller
-
Janeth Chepngetich books world championships slot with upset win
-
French Open sensation Boisson withdraws injured from Montreal
-
France's culture minister to be tried on corruption charges
-
US Treasury chief says no reason for Fed chair to step down
-
Coca-Cola plans US cane sugar alternative after Trump push
-
US to leave UN cultural body, citing 'national interest'
-
India's Gill accuses England of ignoring 'spirit of the game' by time-wasting
-
Heat forces new Acropolis closure amid fiery temperatures
-
US Treasury chief eyes China tariff deadline extension in talks next week
-
Mbeumo thrilled to follow in Ronaldo's footsteps at 'biggest club in the world' Man Utd
-
Alcaraz withdraws from Toronto event for Wimbledon recovery
-
Markets mixed as investors eye earnings and Trump tariffs
-
India's Gill accuses England of ignoring 'spirit of the game' with time-wasting
-
Van der Poel drops out of Tour de France with pneumonia
-
Stokes ready to push through pain barrier against India
-
Newcastle cult hero 'Nobby' Solano appointed Pakistan coach
-
Heatwave hits water, electricity supplies across much of Iran
-
Pakistan landslide after heavy rain kills 5, with 15 missing
-
AstraZeneca to invest $50 bn in the US as tariff threat looms

Men urged to train themselves to notice household chores: study
Gender imbalance in shouldering domestic work is explained by different ways in which men and women perceive chores, philosophers at Britain's Cambridge University suggest.
Women looking at an unclean surface may see something to be wiped whereas men may just observe a crumb-covered countertop, researchers argue in the journal Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.
They say data gathered during the pandemic, when both men and women spent time at the domestic coalface, throw up two important questions -- why women continue to take on most housework and why men believe it to be more equally shared than it is.
According to a survey of US households during the pandemic, 70 percent of women said they were fully or mostly responsible for housework, and 66 percent for childcare, roughly the same proportion as usual.
Tom McClelland, from Cambridge University's department of history and philosophy of science, said the fact that inequalities persisted and that many men continued to be oblivious meant that traditional explanations were not the whole story.
The researchers say "affordance theory" in which people experience objects and situations as having actions implicitly attached could explain the disparity.
According to the study, when a woman enters a kitchen, she is more likely to see dishes to be washed or a fridge to be stocked.
But the study was not about absolving men or making excuses, they said.
Perception is shaped on practice and people can train themselves into good habits, McClelland told AFP.
"If you're boiling the kettle, look to see if there are any crumbs that need wiping up. Over time you won't need the routine because the crumbs will start to grab your attention... They'll call out to be wiped up and you won't need to be so deliberate."
McClelland said the study was aimed at understanding such phenomena from an academic perspective and influencing policy areas such as paid paternal leave.
"One of the important things about parental leave is it's not just about the distribution of caring work during the early months of a child's life it's about how those early months tune you in to caring tasks in the future," he said.
"If a man has more extended parental leave, he'd be more tuned into those caring needs... and that would lead into more equitable distribution of caring and labouring in the future."
O.M.Souza--AMWN