Who cares? What's the point?

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I track down cutting edge researchers from around the globe publishing thought-provoking, and potentially game changing research about why we behave the way we do. I will invite them to tell us briefly about their research, and then I will prompt them to answer those two questions – who cares, and…

Sarb Johal


    • Jun 13, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 32m AVG DURATION
    • 42 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Who cares? What's the point?

    30,000 Days with Hamish McKenzie

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022


    Hi friends, In this conversation, I talk with Hamish about the experiences have shaped his journey through life so far, and the societal problems he is trying to solve through developing Substack. Hamish shares how connection with a special tribe when he moved to study at Dunedin was an important part of his journey, as well as his sink-or-swim move to Hong Kong, and then joining Tesla as Lead Writer.  Hamish is the author of Insane Mode: How Elon Musk’s Tesla Sparked an Electric Revolution to End the Age of Oil. He is a New Zealander living in San Francisco. Enjoy our conversation and be sure to drop a comment about what you think. Please leave a review on Apple podcasts - it helps people find the show, and helps me out a ton too. Thanks. If you’re a paid member, thanks for your support. I couldn’t do this without you. Please consider becoming a paid member if you aren’t already. Cheers,Sarb Get full access to Noise Reduction by Sarb Johal at noisereduction.substack.com/subscribe

    Nerve-wracking pre-departure Covid test

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2022 4:10


    8.50am - Wellington CityIt's Sunday morning and it's the moment of truth. I'm in Wellington CBD and I am about to go and do my supervised RAT. I need a negative test in order to get on my flight to LA and then on to London later on today. So this is one of the places in Wellington (Chemist Warehouse) that does it. I'm recording this on my Apple Watch so I'm hopefully this is still going to be audible for you but I'm going to go in now. I'm about 10 minutes early for my appointment and let's see how we go …8.56amI’ve just done the test. You actually just do the test yourself - the pharmacist was there watching you and making sure your form is good. Just five twists in each nostril on the same swab and now I'm outside waiting. I will see if I just keep that one red line on the RAT - I am I'm hoping they don’t see two lines. Actually pretty nervous now. If I am positive, I don’t think I can fly for at least another 7 days. And that will screw a whole lot of arrangements up. 9.04amI just got my passport back but I've been told I've got another 15 minutes to wait which is more than a little nerve racking …9.20amOh that's an absolute relief. I've just got my Covid negative test back and I've got all the documentation - everything that I need now to board my plane to Los Angeles and London later on today. Gosh that was quite nerve racking but pretty simple. You do the test yourself but you are watched by the pharmacist to make sure that you're doing it correctly and they're the ones that do all the reagent stuff back behind the scenes whilst you're outside in the waiting. They see to all the paperwork for you - you do need to take your passport with you to confirm your identity and so that they can put that down on the documentation. I’m assuming that can be cross checked when you're at the airport. Alright, I hope that's helpful. I'm just going to hang out with my family now for the rest of the day and in a much more a stressfree way before I head to the airport around about 4 o'clock.3.30pm - Wellington Airport I'm here at Wellington airport and I'm just going to try and check in and see everything that's involved with that. Wish me luck once again.4pm Reflecting back on that little experience, walking through the airport maybe about 30% of people are wearing masks here in Wellington. Check-in itself was pretty easy. I presented my Covid vaccination proof - the international vaccine certificate, the Covid negative supervised RAT I did this morning, the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) form for the US was all signed and details completed, and the ESTA on my passport was all done. They did the usual thing with the passport and boarding cards and it was all pretty painless. They had a fish through my stuff in security and had a little bit of an issue with a coin purse that is a little bit too jammed with the silver quarter dollars.“Maybe take that out next time you go through security”, they said because I couldn't see through it. Other than that, I am I'm here with a coffee. I'll probably just sort this podcast out and take a few photos on my way through from Wellington up to Auckland. When I get to the airport I've been assured that there will be extra security for people going through to the US and I'll await to see what that's like. In the meantime, I'll guess I'll have that coffee - a decaf given it's so late at about 4 pm now. Get full access to Noise Reduction by Sarb Johal at noisereduction.substack.com/subscribe

    Poverty is rising. Will we turn a blind eye?

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 23:11


    Listen above to an interview I did today with Bernard Hickey from the excellent The Kākā Substack. It really is rather excellent and I can highly recommend you take a look if you haven’t already. Today’s post is the latest in a series of deeper dives I’ll make into topics that come up in my curated weekly Noise Reduction newsletter, and / or public interest topics and other good stuff. I couldn’t do this work without the support of my paid subscribers. Thank you. If you’re not a paid subscriber, please consider becoming one. Financial insecurity tightly constrains how we experience the world. It also limits the trajectories of life that may be available to us. This is not about personal responsibility and having the resourcefulness or energy to ‘choose’ to do something about your situation. Many of these ‘choices’ are not available for us to make - not because we don’t have money at the moment, but because our entire relationship with money and its inter-relationship with how we meet our most fundamental needs have become warped. Financial precarity means this is not a level playing fieldIn modern society, money is very much tied up in our sense of self-worth. I’m not talking about the amount of money you need to buy a flash car, or an iPhone. I’m talking about the basics. Not just feeding, clothing and housing ourselves and our loved ones, but also not sticking out and being socially identified as impoverished. Not being that kid with the gaping holes in their uniform, or shoes that are leaky or don’t fit. Or perhaps not having shoes at all. A life of dignity, not unending shame. And according to a report by the Child Poverty Action Group in 2017, over 1 in 4 children in New Zealand were living in relative income poverty. It’s unlikely things have got much better, especially in these inflationary times. We often think that mental health issues cause poverty. But this simplifies and misrepresents the relationship in all kinds of ways. The link between poverty and children’s mental health is well recognised in a range of international research. This relationship not only affects childhood experience, but also extends out into adulthood too. Not only does impoverishment cause mental health issues, it also means people who are financially insecure just don’t have the bandwidth available, the luxury of being able to think about wide-ranging life issues and pleasurable pursuits in ways that people who are financially stable are able to do.Scarcity ‘consumes your mental bandwidth’ …It crashes your IQ by 13-points - that the equivalent to trying to think after being forced to stay up all night without sleep. That’s how powerful scarcity is. Imagine that, day in, day out. Financial insecurity corrodes your adaptive capacityThink about it like this: when you have financial security, when you have money to deal with short-term stresses that need cash to solve them, you have a reserve of adaptive capacity that helps to smooth out the ups-and-downs of life. Sure, they may throw you off kilter for a while, and while money won’t solve everything, it can go a long way towards solving your problem. Other stresses that pop up during this time will be unpleasant, but are manageable. People without that cash, without that financial security are going to not only feel that short-term stress a lot more because they know they don’t have the financial means to deal with them, but it then cascades to how they experience further short-term stresses: much more acute, and far more disturbing. Constant financial insecurity can also change how we process informationHave a comfortable buffer of cash means that you’re less likely to see the world as a threat all the time. Stresses come and stresses go, but being financially stable enables you not only to think strategically and creatively but also not to ruminate and obsess about how to get yourself out of a tricky situation. Money helps you to move on and think differently. However, tight financial constraints and  / or a history of finding it difficult to make ends meet means that we can be a perpetual state of apprehension, seeing threat everywhere. Food prices, overcrowded houses causing family strife, and living in houses that are hard to heat. Parents are working multiple jobs and are preoccupied with navigating their way through a tough world and not being able to spend enough time with their kids, even though they desperately want to. “A person in poverty might be at the high part of the performance curve when it comes to a specific task and, in fact, we show that they do well on the problem at hand. But they don’t have leftover bandwidth to devote to other tasks. The poor are often highly effective at focusing on and dealing with pressing problems. It’s the other tasks where they perform poorly.”“The fallout of neglecting other areas of life may loom larger for a person just scraping by... Late fees tacked on to a forgotten rent payment, a job lost because of poor time-management — these make a tight money situation worse. And as people get poorer, they tend to make difficult and often costly decisions that further perpetuate their hardship” - Eldar Shafir, Princeton’s William Stewart Tod Professor of Psychology and Public AffairsThe luxury of bandwidthThis is not a delusion: the world really is a harsher place when we are financially insecure. We have fewer choices available, and our minds are fixed on solving the problem in the here-and-now. This is how the brain works. Creative, playful, sensitive and strategic thinking are luxuries our brains afford us when the threat has passed. If we are in a constant state of threat-management, we seldom experience these brain states. We are just focused on managing the latest in a long line of seemingly never-ending stresses. We can become both aggressive in trying to fight the latest threat, yet also feel helpless in the face of overwhelming odds. Here is the plausible link to not only limited choices and seemingly ‘bad decisions’ as they have been framed, but also to how these states can be passed on from one generation to another. Growing up in financial insecurity seriously impoverishes the time you get to spend in creative or strategic states that are playful or can focus on the long-term. You grow up in an environment of trying to manage the here-and-how, and how threatening this can be. So we learn to solve, or most likely, try to live with, these problems, and the social stigma and impoverishment that comes with them. You can’t take part in a ‘normal’ life in a society like others all around you do. Or we get left behind by friends who carry on doing what ‘normal’ people do. And we become more isolated, more alone, and we feel more stress.This is the impoverishment funnel This is not a ‘choice’. It’s survival. It’s existing, not living.As a society, we can decide on whether we want these inequalities, these distortions, to remain. If we accept that financial insecurity is a key factor in what leads people down the impoverishment funnel, then what should we do? Shouldn’t we be able to live a life where we can access not only the bare essentials but also what enables us to live a public life with dignity? Lack of income is a fundamental problem that needs to be fixed in a just society. A parallel approach might also be to remove the income requirement to access key services, such as making public transport and access to key social, health and cultural amenities free. The situation is critical. As a society, are we prepared to get out of threat-management mode and lift our head beyond the three-year parliamentary cycle of short-term fixes? Can we think strategically and creatively for the long-term? Because unless deal with the inability of people to meet their basic needs through adequate income and services, we are dooming them to ‘choices’ they have no control over, and wilfully impoverishing generations to leading diminished lives, and stripping them of their dignity. It is that stark. Will we choose to intervene?We have the financial bandwidth to choose a national poverty reduction programme to improve lives and break inter-generational cycles of poverty, improve the social determinants of wellbeing and break the shackles of financial insecurity. Imagine the pain it would diminish and the creative and strategic thinking it could unleash. As far as policy programmes go, this is a no-brainer. Thank you for reading Noise Reduction by Sarb Johal. This post is public so feel free to share it. Get full access to Noise Reduction by Sarb Johal at noisereduction.substack.com/subscribe

    Can meditation help us to do good?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 32:09


    Many people think that meditation can not only have an impact on stress and illness, but can also improve prosociality. But meditation and prosociality are multi-dimensional constructs: so what exactly are we talking about here? Listen to my conversation with Dr Ute Kreplin at the School of Psychology, Massey University in New Zealand as we talk about her research examining this link, and how the way stadies are carried out can affect the sorts of results they report and how we need to be careful about how we interpret them. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How the sting of rejection shapes the pleasure of revenge

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 36:57


    What is revenge? How can we understand this dark emotion? The sayings, ‘revenge is sweet’ and that ‘revenge is a dish best served cold’ are revealing. Listen to my conversation with David Chester, Assistant Professor at the Psychology Department of Virginia Commonwealth University, as I talk with him about his programme of research over the past few years looking at dimensions of revenge and how we relate to this complex emotion. We also touch upon the idea of social pain and loneliness, how one of the worst forms of pain for a human is to be ignored, and how films often depict time slowing down when it portrays violence - believe me, its and interesting and wide-ranging conversation! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Mental health research: Male footballers, LGB Youth, and Acceptance & Commitment Therapy psychoeducation

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 40:49


    Welcome to this special conference edition of Who cares? What's the point? In January 2018, I traveled to Cardiff in Wales, UK for two days to participate in the British Psychological Society's Division of Clinical Psychology Annual Conference. When I was there, I was fortunate enough to talk with three researchers about the fascinating work they were doing. So, this show has not one, but three interviews and research topics. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How do you choose a mental health app for your smartphone?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 39:26


    At some times in our lives, we might want to get support with our mental health and wellbeing. Perhaps we are struggling with a particular issue, or maybe we want to be proactive and take steps to make sure we are adopting healthy practices to keep us on top of things. This days, we have our smartphones with us almost all the time, and this is a natural place for many people to turn to for support or inspiration. But how do you go about choosing a mental health or wellbeing app? And do you know if it is a good one or not? Listen to my conversation with David Bakker, a doctoral candidate in Clinical Psychology at Monash University in Australia. We talk about his recent research reviewing mental health apps, and some evidence-based recommendations for future app development. Finally, we talk about his involvement in developing some if these apps as part of a team that is working to improve the choices for people using these apps, and the clinicians who might be working with them. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    What's behind the rising tide of anger on the internet?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 32:30


    Recent local and world events seem to have triggered, or perhaps have reflected and amplified increasingly polarised views. These views can be expressed online in ways that come across as angry and appear seemingly everywhere - so much so that many websites have turned off their channels for community participation because they have become too difficult to manage. Against the background of verbal attacks becoming all too frequent online, join me as I talk with Ryan Martin, Psychology Chairperson and Professor of Psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay in the USA as we talk about his paper exploring the ways that anger is expressed and experienced on the internet, and our conversation about how this might apply to social media and our emotional development and processing. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Home alone: Why people believe others' social lives are richer than their own

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 26:42


    People usually tend to over-estimate their own capabilities and qualities compared to others. For examples, people tend to believe they are more intelligent, trustworthy, moral and happier than others, as well as making better leaders, and drivers. However, when it comes to thinking about our social lives, what little we know seems to indicate that we think other people have more rich, vibrant and satisfying social lives than we do ourselves. Join me as I talk with Sebastian Deri - postgraduate researcher at Cornell University in the USA - as we talk about his paper about a series of 11 experiments designed to explore how we compare our social lives to others and where our pessimistic bias might come from. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Do teachers believe in "neuromyths" just as much as everyone else?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 37:53


    There are some commonly held misconceptions in the general public about how the brain works and how it affects how we learn - these are often called "neuromyths." We know that the general public can fall prey to these much of the time, but what about our educators? And if teachers believe in these neuromyths, what does it mean for how they teach, or how schools allocate their resources? And can we protect against falling for these neuromyths by better training? Join me as I talk with Kelly Macdonald - doctoral candidate in clinical psychology at the University of Houston, and Asst Professor Dr Lauren McGrath at the University of Denver - both in the USA - as we talk about their paper exploring belief in neuromyths by educators and the general public, and how we can change things. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    The number of photos we take has increased hugely. How does this change our experience of life?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 38:59


    For many of you listening to this podcast, taking photos of things and people in our lives has become much more common, as well as documenting our experiences of life. Understanding how the act of taking photos may get in the way of or increase our pleasure in these activities seems like an important topic for research. Implicitly, we may hear the message that we should stop taking so many photos and just be in the moment and enjoy our experiences without trying to record everything. But is this true? Does photography - especially using our smartphones - get in the way? Join me as I talk with Asst Prof Alixandra Barasch, based in the Stern Business School, New York University, USA. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    The language of ageism, and how we use it against ourselves

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 28:57


    There has been a lot of recent attention on gender pay equity, the re-emergence of racism in western societies, and how youth mental health has been an increasing concern in recent years. However, the way we talk about older people, and indeed, how older people view and talk about themselves is also revealing of deeper attitudes and biases. Join me as I talk with Assoc Prof Dr Tracey Gendron, based in the Department of Gerontology in the School of Allied Health Professions at Virginia Commonwealth University, USA. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Regulations of love: How to feel better when relationships end

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 32:22


    Most people will experience a relationship break up. They can be hard to get over. One way to manage this is to try to actively decrease the feelings of love you have for your ex-partner? But does this work? Do people believe they can control their feelings of love in this way? Can you actually do this? Join me as I talk with Asst Prof Dr Sandra Langeslag, based at the Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri - St Louis. We talk about how she tested three strategies for regulating love feelings after a break-up and how successful they were, using brain activity and self-report data as her measures. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    4 in 5 people experience a mental health disorder by midlife. What do we know about those who don't?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 40:40


    You might be familiar with the often quoted statistic that 1 in 4 or 1 in 5 people experience mental health difficulties. What you might not be aware of is that is the answer if people are answering about what they are experiencing at that particular point in time. Long-term studies following the same people over time show that more than 4 out of 5 people (actually 87%) have experienced a mental health disorder by the time they reach age 38. This radically changes our understanding, meaning that mental health disorders are far more widely experienced than previously thought. In this show, I talk with Jonathan Schaefer at the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience at Duke University in the USA, and his work looking at the data generated by New Zealand's Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study and that research team. We talk about the idea of enduring mental health: that is, what is it about the 13% of people that defines those that do not experience a mental health disorder by age 38, and what this might mean for 'social investment' approaches and universal mental health care provision, amongst a range of other topics. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Can the news media play a key role in triggering psychological reactions to terrorism?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 34:25


    In July 2011, Anders Breivik killed 77 adults and children in a bombing in Oslo and a subsequent shooting on a nearby island where the Norwegian Labor Party's youth organisation was having their summer camp. I talk with Dr Bertel Hansen of the Department of Political Science at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark about the impact of that event in Norway on the incidence of trauma- and stressor-related disorders in the neighbouring country of Denmark, and discuss this with respect to of the impact on that same population of the 9/11 attacks. We discuss the impacts of geographical proximity, cultural similarity, and the possible influence of the news media on the incidence of disorders following terrorist attacks. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Scared behind the wheel: How driving anxiety may influence our health and wellbeing

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 34:31


    Learning to drive has been a rite of passage in many societies for decades. For many, it is a central part of their everyday lives, especially if they live in rural areas, or where other alternatives aren't as practical or appealing. But what happens if we become anxious about driving? How might that shape our lives and wellbeing? In this show I speak with Dr Joanne Taylor, Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychology at Massey University in New Zealand. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Creating consciousness: Our brain's top-down, bottom-up framework for making sense of the world around & within us

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 43:00


    Consciousness is a curious and complex phenomenon. There are many ideas about what consciousness means and how it comes about, but I came across a compelling and relatively simple argument when I attended TEDFest this year - where the TED2017 conference was livestreamed for TEDx conference organisers from around the world, all convened in New York. In this show I speak with Dr Anil Seth, Professor of Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience at the University of Sussex in the UK. He is also Co-Director at the Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science. We talk about how the brain tries to make sense of the world outside, but also integrates information coming from inside the body to help us perceive the world and our place in relation to it. We talk about the origin of emotions, mindfulness, mental illness and possible applications for the framework he proposes. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    The surprising upsides of worrying

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 30:19


    Worrying can be described as the process of unpleasant thoughts that keep coming back and cause us to be anxious or distressed. Although it's certainly true that worrying is often seen as a problem, there is increasing evidence that it can also be seen in positive ways too. In this show I speak with Associate Professor Kate Sweeny from the Department of Psychology at the University of California, Riverside in the USA. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    If we write our name on an object, will we recycle it or trash it?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 31:43


    If you drink coffee and buy that in a shop, the barista might call out your name - which may be written on your disposable cup - when it's ready. Does the fact that your name is written on the cup have an influence on whether you choose to recycle it or not? Even if they spelled your name wrong? --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    1747 people talk about their experience taking antidepressants

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 28:32


    About 1 in 9 adult New Zealanders receive a prescription for antidepressants each year. Although we think they are generally helpful for people, we know surprisingly little about what it might be like to take them. This week I speak with Associate Professor Dr Kerry Gibson from the School of Psychology at the University of Auckland in New Zealand to find out more. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Do we fear death less after a near-death experience?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 36:04


    'Near-death experiences' come up often in films and novels - the idea of a 'white light' or experiencing meeting loved ones from years before. But are there common aspects to these experiences? And what sorts of consequences might they have once you have them? This week I speak with Dr Natasha Tassell-Matamua, Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychology at Massey University, New Zealand to find out more. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    We know that divorce and health are linked - but how exactly does this link work?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 33:21


    It is pretty well established that the experience of marital; separation and divorce is a risk for a range of poor health outcomes, even many years after the event. But how are these events linked? Although the association is established, the pathway between the two is not well understood. In this episode, I talk with Professor David Sbarra, in the Department of Psychology at the University of Arizona in the USA, where he is also the Director of Clinical Training in the Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology. In this conversation, we focus on David's work looking close relationships and health. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How climate change affects us mentally and socially, whether you believe in it or not

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 40:37


    When you think about climate change- psychology and mental health may not be the first thing that you think of. However, the two are very much connected. As well as possible mental health disorders such as anxiety or depression, psychological responses to climate change such as fatalism, fear, helplessness and resignation are growing. These responses might be keeping us from addressing the core causes of and developing solutions for our changing climates and the consequences of this, as well as building and supporting psychological resiliency. Join me as I discuss this with one of the authors of a new report from the American Psychological Association; Susan Clayton, Professor of Psychology at the College of Wooster in Ohio, USA. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How do 3-4 year olds think about hide and seek?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 26:55


    Have you played hide and seek with a small child and found them in seconds as they sit in the middle of the room with their eyes covered, convinced that you can't see them? In this episode, I talk with Asst Professor Henrike Moll, in the Department of Psychology at the University of Southern California in the USA. In this conversation, we focus on Henrike's work looking at the social-cognitive development of pre-schoolers and how they appear to apply a principle of bidirectional social interaction, or "I can't see you, unless you can see me", and vice versa. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    When we think about our own death, do we become more open to religious ideas?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 47:46


    Do we become more religious when we think about our own death. Or at least, less religiously skeptical? In this episode, I talk with Dr. Jonathan Jong, currently a Research Fellow at Coventry University, and Deputy Director of the Brain, Belief and Behaviour group there. He is also the Research Coordinator of the Institute for Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology at the University of Oxford. In this conversation, we focus on Jonathan's PhD work - in New Zealand - on understanding the link between death anxiety and religious belief. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No! It's a key discovery about how human memory is related to motion

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 41:10


    In this episode, I talk with Mark Schurgin, Graduate Fellow based in the Visual Thinking Lab at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, USA. We talk about Mark's work combining his experience and knowledge of vision research memory, investigating how basic knowledge that we have about how the world works - our 'core knowledge' supports our memory about objects. We talk more about how Mark discovered this, and implications for processes such as machine learning for autonomous self-driving vehicles, devices such as Alexa or Siri, facial recognition software. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How do people with multiracial (or multicultural) backgrounds navigate their social identity?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 30:20


    In this episode, I talk with Dr. Sarah Gaither, Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience at Duke University in the USA. In this conversation, we focus on Sarah's work on understanding multiracial identities and the costs and benefits of navigating that social terrain. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Do people prefer psychotherapy to drug therapy?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 35:42


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Joshua Swift, Assistant Professor in Psychology, based at Idaho State University in the USA. In this conversation, we focus on Joshua's work with his colleagues on treatment refusal and premature termination in psychotherapy, pharmacotherapy, and their combination. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    To sleep or not to sleep? That is the on-call question

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 43:50


    In this episode, I talk with Professor Sally Ferguson, based at the Appleton Institute in Adelaide, Australia, and Deputy Dean of Research in the School of Human Health and Social Sciences at Central Queensland University. In this conversation, we focus on Sally's work on the effects of restricted sleep on performance for people who are on-call. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Why do we tend to pick objects in the centre?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 35:31


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Ute Kreplin who is based at Massey University's School of Psychology in New Zealand. In this conversation, we focus on Ute's work on the Centre Stage effect. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    What do we know about the nocebo effect and how it works?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 31:08


    In this episode, I talk with Rebecca Webster who is based at King's College in the University of London, UK. In this conversation, we focus on Rebecca's work on s systematic review on the 'nocebo effect' - what it is and how it might work. We also talk about what researchers mean when they talk about a systematic review. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Is human language underpinned by gestures?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 43:41


    In this episode, I talk with Emeritus Professor Michael Corballis, who is based at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. Professor Corballis is an internationally acclaimed scholar and one of his most recent accolades is the ward of the Rutherford Medal by the Royal Society of New Zealand. In this conversation, we focus particular on Michael's ideas about how gestures may have been the precursors for spoken language development in humans. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Is there a link between dehydration and our experience of pain?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 31:05


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Toby Mundel of the School of Sport and Exercise Science at Massey University in New Zealand. We talk about his recent work investigating the relationship between people's hydration levels and their experience of pain. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Does turning the clocks back for winter-time lead to a higher rate of depression?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 24:21


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Bertel Teilfeldt Hansen of the Department of Political Science at Copenhagen University in Denmark. We talk about his involvement in this project looking at the impact of clock changes in winter-time on the incidence in depression, and how he got involved in the research. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How young women use food to make friends at school

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 24:56


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Eva Neely, Lecturer at the School of Public Health at Massey University, here in Wellington, New Zealand. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    How to tell the difference between fact and fiction on a 'post-truth' internet

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 39:37


    We find it difficult to tell the difference between fake and real news. We create 'bubbles' and echo chambers on our computers and smartphones, which make it even more difficult. Listen to how we can start breaking that down so we can get less biased information, and become more aware of our blindspots. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Mapping the link between biodiversity and our wellbeing

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 19:24


    In this episode, I talk with Laurie Parma of The Department of Psychology at the University of Cambridge in the UK. We talk about her involvement in development if the NatureBuzz app - a citizen science / crowdsourcing endeavor. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    What do we know about sleep paralysis?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 31:51


    In this episode, I talk with Associate Professor Brian Sharpless of the American School of Professional Psychology, Argosy University, Washington DC, USA. We talk about his recent work understanding and developing treatment recommendations for sleep paralysis - a surprisingly common but little-understood phenomenon --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Emoji and emoticons: Do we mimic what we see?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 33:16


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Michael Philipp of the School of Psychology, Massey University in New Zealand. We talk about his recent study on emoji and emoticons in computer-based communications. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    What do we know about the idea of creepiness?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 27:32


    In this episode, I talk with Professor Frank McAndrew of Knox College, a liberal arts college in Illinois, USA. We talk about his recent study trying to get a grip on how people understand the concept of creepiness. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    Father's parenting stress and toddler language development

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 21:33


    Despite numerous studies on parenting stress suggesting negative influences on parent–child interactions and children's development, the majority of these studies focus on mothers' parenting stress with little or no acknowledgement of fathers. Using data from the National Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project, this study examined (i) the effects of fathers' parenting stress during toddlerhood on children's language and cognitive outcomes when children are 3 years old (ii) whether the effects of fathers' parenting stress on children's language and cognitive development vary by child gender? Results from mixed linear models showed fathers' parenting stress predicted children's lower cognitive scores, but there were no gender differences in the effects of fathers' parenting stress on children's cognitive outcomes. In the language domain, boys, not girls, were found to be more susceptible to the effects of fathers' parenting stress. These findings indicated that fathers, in addition to mothers, should be included in early parenting research and interventions. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

    What influence could climate change have on human aggression?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2018 22:33


    In this episode, I talk with Dr Matt Williams, Lecturer in Psychology at Massey University here in New Zealand. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sarb-johal/message

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