Authoralluttrell

I'm a social psychologist.

BONUS: Good Accidents with Elliot Aronson

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Elliot Aronson has seen a long and influential career in social psychology. Aronson got his PhD in 1959 from Stanford University, working with Leon Festinger on some of the first experiments testing dissonance theory. He authored a celebrated social psychology textbook, now in its twelfth edition, and he pioneered the research on the jigsaw classroom–“a cooperative learning...

BONUS: Dissonance and the New Look with Joel Cooper

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Last week’s special episode on cognitive dissonance pulled together interviews with several people who are experts in the field. Joel Cooper is one of those experts! When I first started getting interested in the social psychology of cognitive dissonance, Joel’s book (Cognitive Dissonance: 50 Years of a Classic Theory) was so useful. You heard snippets of this interview in last...

Episode 20: The Cognitive Dissonance Episode

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In 1957, Leon Festinger published A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance. Along with a collection of compelling experiments, Festinger changed the landscape of social psychology. The theory, now referenced constantly both in and outside of academic circles, has taken on a life of its own. And it’s still informing new research and analysis more than 60 years later. For the grand 20th episode...

Episode 19: Political Humor as Persuasion with Danna Young

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Dr. Dannagal Young studies political humor. She pulls together psychology, communications, and political science, to understand how political satire works to change minds and expand political knowledge. She also has a new book: Irony and Outrage: The Polarized Landscape of Rage, Fear, and Laughter in the United States, which explores how satire became a tool of political left and...

Episode 18: Health Communication with Allison Earl

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Allison Earl studies the challenges of getting health information to people who need it. Her research looks at how people react defensively to information about their health and how to improve it. In this episode, she shares her research on people’s tendency to avoid threatening health information and how simple meditation exercises can make people more open to these kinds of messages...

Episode 17: How We Think About Animals with Kristof Dhont

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Kristof Dhont studies the psychology behind humans’ complicated feelings about animals. In particular, his research looks at how the existence of “speciesism” can stem from the same psychological factors that also produce other social prejudices. In this episode, Kristof and I talk about how people avoid connecting meat to the animals it comes from, how a social dominance worldview gives...

Episode 16: Implicit Bias with Mahzarin Banaji

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Mahzarin Banaji is a professor of psychology at Harvard University. In the 90s, she and her colleagues pioneered the research in social psychology on implicit bias. They are perhaps best known for creating the Implicit Association Test (IAT), which purports to measure the preferences that people are unable or unwilling to say they have. Using this tool, psychologists have arrived...

Episode 14: Certainty with Zakary Tormala

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Dr. Zakary Tormala is a professor of behavioral science and marketing at Stanford University’s business school. He studies how people can become certain of an opinion and what that means for their willingness to share their views. We talk about what certainty is, how it affects people’s choices and resistance to change, and how the research about certainty can inform best...

Episode 13: Fake News with Gordon Pennycook

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Dr. Gordon Pennycook studies why people share misinformation. His research has used many techniques to understand people’s ability to judge the accuracy of information, their willingness to share that information, and what we can do to encourage people to only spread true information. Some of the things that come up in this episode: There’s lots of coronavirus misinformation out...

alluttrell

I'm a social psychologist.

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