CategoryUncategorized

Episode 69: Directing Attention with Tony Barnhart (ft. Erik Tait)

E

Tony Barnhart is Associate Professor of Psychological Science at Carthage College. But just as notably, he’s a magician. As a result of this dual identity, he has the unique distinction of being an expert in the psychology of magic. Magicians have long prided themselves on understanding and exploiting human psychology, but Tony actually brings a scientific perspective. He’s on the...

Episode 68: Intellectual Humility with Tenelle Porter

E

Tenelle Porter is a new colleague of mine at Ball State University. She’s an educational psychologist, and one of the things she studies is intellectual humility, which is people’s awareness of the limits of their knowledge and the fallibility of their reasoning. Intellectual humility offers a variety of handy benefits even though there has been some disagreement about what it is...

Episode 67: Confronting Prejudice with Margo Monteith

E

Margo Monteith is a Distinguished Professor of Psychological Sciences at Purdue University. She studies how we can reduce prejudice in the world by confronting those biases head-on. One way we can confront prejudice is to keep ourselves in check, paying attention to the ways in which we might say or do something biased. Another way we can confront prejudice is to call out other people when they...

Episode 66: Your Language Shapes your Opinions with Efrén Pérez

E

Efrén Pérez is a professor is a professor of Political Science and Psychology at UCLA. He studies political attitudes and behaviors among various racial and ethnic groups in the United States. With Margit Tavits, he recently co-wrote the book Voicing Politics: How Language Shapes Public Opinion. The book is a fascinating summary of research they have conducted testing how the unique...

Episode 65: Language is for Doing with Thomas Holtgraves

E

Tom Holtgraves studies how language helps us do things. We use words to inquire, to instruct, to command, and to persuade. Words are social. He’s currently a Professor of Psychological Science at Ball State University (just down the hall from me!), and his lab studies how people use language and other symbols (e.g., emoji) to successfully or unsuccessfully communicate with one...

Episode 64: Saving Democracy with Robb Willer

E

Robb Willer studies social and political divides, and maybe more importantly, he tries to find ways to overcome them. In our conversation, he shares his personal background, unpacks persuasion strategies that cut across political lines, and reveals the results of a major new study in his lab that tested a bunch of strategies for reducing political animosity and encouraging people to value...

Episode 63: Why We Need Polls with G. Elliott Morris

E

G. Elliott Morris is a data journalist for The Economist. In July 2022, he’s releasing his first book, Strength in Numbers: How Polls Work and Why We Need Them. The book takes a critical look at the history and current use of public opinion polling and the role it plays in democracy. Morris also contributed to The Economist’s 2020 presidential election forecasts. We talk about how he got involved...

Episode 62: Persuasion via Emotion with Robin Nabi

E

Robin Nabi is a professor of communication at the University of California-Santa Barbara. She studies how emotional appeals can (and cannot) lead people to change their thoughts and behaviors. She’s published important research on the effects of anger, humor, and guilt, and she’s also developed integrated theories about how emotions can work together in the persuasion process. We talk about all...

Episode 61: Moral Conviction with Linda Skitka

E

Linda Skitka is a distinguished professor of psychology at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She’s been studying people’s moral convictions–the opinions that we connect to our core sense of moral right and wrong. Two people might agree about universal healthcare, for example, but they might disagree about how much their positions on this issue are drawn from their personal...

Episode 60: Unconscious Bias? with Adam Hahn

E

Adam Hahn spends a lot of time thinking about how well people know their own biases. Sure, people often refer to “implicit bias” as social biases that exist unconsciously. But do they really? How strongly can we claim we’re unaware of these attitudes and is there any reason to think people can readily tell you what their gut reactions are when they encounter people of...

support

Get in touch