Have you ever wondered how Nobel Prize laureates think about the world? Take a look at how six laureates tackled challenges they faced in life and research, and how the lessons they learnt can help us navigate our own lives.
The right way to be wrong
Saul Perlmutter advocates for a world where we are more careful with what we say is truth.
More about the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics
More about the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics
Why nobody's too smart to be taken in online
Maria Ressa knows how lies on social media can spread further than the truth.
Watch Ressa delve deeper in her Nobel Prize lecture
Watch Ressa delve deeper in her Nobel Prize lecture
The benefits of feeling like an outsider
Peter Doherty's unconventional career made it possible to see things with fresh eyes.
Read Doherty's account of being an outsider
Read Doherty's account of being an outsider
How to navigate your life goals
Whatever problem you're trying to solve, breaking it into smaller steps can help you find the answer.
More about the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
More about the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Why do we focus on negatives?
According to Daniel Kahneman reacting to threats helped us to survive through our evolution history.
Find out more about Kahneman
Find out more about Kahneman
The detective skills that can help you analyse information
With curiosity and meticulous work Claudia Goldin changed the way we see society.
Read Goldin's biography
Read Goldin's biography
This series of animated videos is a collaboration between BBC World Service and Nobel Prize Outreach.