Categoryscicomm

SciComm Summer #9: Jesse Thorn – Interviewing

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Jesse Thorn hosts the show “Bullseye” on NPR where he interviews people in arts and culture. A few years ago, he interviewed a bunch of incredible interviewers for his podcast, “The Turnaround.” He’s just the guy to talk to about the craft of interviewing people of note, which is a skill that’s called for in lots of science communication efforts. So I...

SciComm Summer #8: Vanessa Bohns – Writing Books as an Academic

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Vanessa Bohns is a social psychologist at Cornell University, and last year she release a book for the public: You Have More Influence Than You Think. It’s a great book about a program of research she’s been working on for year. I wanted to talk to Vanessa about what it was like to translate her research into a format that would be useful and digestible for non-academic audiences. We...

SciComm Summer #7: Daniel Pink – Writing Books

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Daniel Pink is a bestselling author who uses social science research to explore big questions about what it means to be human. He’s written seven books, and his newest one came out last February—The Power of Regret. You can also check out his Masterclass on sales and persuasion. In our conversation, Dan gives a look into his writing process. How does he go from an idea...

SciComm Summer #6: Evelyn Carter – Training & Consulting

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Evelyn Carter is a social psychologist who specializes in communicating science-based practices in diversity, equity, and inclusion to organizations. She leads workshops, gives talks, develops courses, gives interviews with the media, and writes newsletters…all of which requires a special skill for making science understandable and actionable. She’s currently the president at Paradigm...

SciComm Summer #5: Taylor Scott – Bridging Research and Policy

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Taylor Scott is an assistant research professor at Penn State, she’s the director of research translation in the Evidence-to-Impact Collaborative, and she’s co-director of the Research-to-Policy Collaboration. In this episode, we talk about the relationship between scientists and policymakers, how to facilitate those interactions, and ultimately what social science...

SciComm Summer #4: David Nussbaum – Writing Op-Eds

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David Nussbaum is a social psychologist with a keen talent for pitching Op-Eds. He’s worked with many social scientists to land articles in major outlets, including the New York Times, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, etc. He recently launched a new non-profit organization, Psychgeist Media, which aims to help researchers share their work with the public in an accurate and engaging...

SciComm Summer #3: David McRaney – Making Social Science Engaging

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David McRaney is a writer and podcaster who has been covering important work in psychology for many years. Although he was a guest on Opinion Science a few months ago (Episode 58: How Minds Change with David McRaney), I also used the opportunity to ask him about his process for communicating psychological research to the public. So, the first 15 minutes of this episode is a repeat of his earlier...

SciComm Summer #2: Meryl Horn – Producing “Science Vs”

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Meryl Horn is a producer at Science Vs from Gimlet Media and Spotify. Science Vs is a popular science podcast that pits timely claims against scientific evidence. It’s a great show. You should listen to it. Before being a podcast producer, Meryl got her PhD in Neuroscience from the University of California San Francisco. She shares how she went from being a graduate...

SciComm Summer #1: Joss Fong – Producing Science Videos

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Joss Fong is a senior editorial producer at Vox. She produces science videos on a variety of topics, pushing the medium in ever more creative directions to convey interesting and important ideas.We spend a lot of our time talking about her most recent video: “How American conservatives turned against the vaccine” Here are some of the other videos we talked about in this...

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