Two psychologists endeavor to drink four beers while discussing news and controversies in science, academia, and beyond.
…
continue reading
The problem of free will has been at the center of many discussions in western philosophy for the last 20 centuries. But in recent years the problem has reappeared in a fresh form. There are new and exciting developments in the field that make this a fascinating topic of conversation. For this podcast we have invited various philosophers who work in free will. Philosophy might be a daunting thing, but with their help we will get to know better the what, the how and the why of free will. Welcome.
…
continue reading
1
Episode 114: Psychology Worth Doing (with Paul Bloom)
1:15:01
1:15:01
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:15:01
Paul Bloom joins the show to talk about a recent paper in which he argues that much of developmental psychology is not worth doing. We also talk about where he thinks psychology has succeeded, and whether we should be more skeptical of progressive-friendly social science findings. Plus: is it ever a good idea to tell your friend that the person the…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 113: The Road to Cincinnati (with Adam Mastroianni)
1:09:53
1:09:53
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:09:53
Researcher and writer Adam Mastroianni joins the podcast to talk about why he left academia, what conventional scientific research might be missing, and how he ended up writing a succesful science blog instead of more journal articles. Plus: what is a Science House? How do we know that psychology is making progress? And should scientific fraud be a…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 112: All About ADHD (with Amori Mikami)
1:00:49
1:00:49
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:00:49
University of British Columbia professor and ADHD expert Amori Mikami joins the show to talk attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). What is it, how has our understanding of it changed over the years, and how accurate is the public discourse about it? Plus, some more on Yoel's own ADHD journey and a quiz where we establish how many of Yoel…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 111: We Are So Back
1:01:33
1:01:33
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:01:33
Mickey joins Yoel for the first new episode in nearly a year. We talk what's been up with the show, plans for the future, and what it feels like to briefly be (almost) internet-famous. In the second half of the show, we talk about expertise and prediction. When social scientists make predictions about the future, should we listen? How much should f…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 110: RE-RELEASE: Destigmatizing Mental Health (with Andrew Devendorf)
1:21:43
1:21:43
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:21:43
Andrew Devendorf joins Alexa and Yoel to discuss his work on "me-search" (or self-relevant research) within clinical psychology. He talks about the prevalence of mental health difficulties within the field, and the harmful taboos against speaking openly about them. And, he shares his own reasons for studying depression and suicide, and how he has b…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 109: RE-RELEASE: Against Mindfulness
1:23:45
1:23:45
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:23:45
Playing devil's advocate, Yoel and Mickey mount a criticism against the scientific study of mindfulness. What is mindfulness? Can we measure it? Is mindfulness-based therapy effective? Can mindfulness improve the quality of attention beyond the meditation cushion? Are effects of mindfulness mostly placebo effects produced by motivated practitioners…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 108: RE-RELEASE: We Need to Talk About Fraud
1:23:20
1:23:20
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:23:20
Yoel and Alexa are joined by Joe Simmons to talk about fraud. We go in-depth on a recent high-profile fraud case, but we also talk about scientific fraud more generally: how common is it, how do you detect it, and what can we do to prevent it? This is a re-release of Episode 73, originally released on September 29, 2021. Special Guest: Joe Simmons.…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 107: Against Anti-DEI Rhetoric
1:07:02
1:07:02
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:07:02
Jennifer Gutsell joins Alexa to discuss the controversy surrounding Yoel's experience interviewing at UCLA. They focus on a post, written by Alexa, in which she pushes back against defenses of "viewpoint diversity" and argues that the graduate petition advocating for diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) was a brave effort that should be taken ser…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 106: We Need to Talk About Fraud Again
1:08:13
1:08:13
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:08:13
Harkening back to episode 73, Alexa and Yoel discuss recent evidence of fraud documented in the Data Colada blog post "Clusterfake." The post is the first in a series of four, which will collectively detail evidence of fraud in four papers co-authored by Harvard Business School Professor Francesca Gino. First, the co-hosts dive into the details, wi…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 105: Patchwork Politics
58:42
58:42
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
58:42
In heated political debates, people are often accused of being hypocrites, lacking consistent foundational values. Today, Yoel and Alexa discuss a recent paper by David Pinsof, David Sears, and Martie Haselton, that challenges the commonsense notion that political belief systems stem from our core values. Instead, the authors propose that people fo…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 104: Quantifying the Narrative of Replicable Science
1:09:18
1:09:18
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:09:18
Yoel and Alexa discuss a recent paper that takes a machine learning approach to estimating the replicability of psychology as a discipline. The researchers' investigation begins with a training process, in which an artificial intelligence model identifies ways that textual descriptions differ for studies that pass versus fail manual replication tes…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 103: Psych (with Paul Bloom)
1:09:26
1:09:26
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:09:26
Alexa and Yoel chat with Paul Bloom about his newest book, Psych: The Story of the Human Mind. The book, built from Paul's popular Introduction to Psychology course, is an opinionated overview of the field of psychology but also a window into his deep fascination with the mind. Yoel and Alexa spend some time picking Paul's brain, inquiring about wr…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 102: Destigmatizing Mental Health (with Andrew Devendorf)
1:19:29
1:19:29
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:19:29
Andrew Devendorf joins Alexa and Yoel to discuss his work on "me-search" (or self-relevant research) within clinical psychology. He talks about the prevalence of mental health difficulties within the field, and the harmful taboos against speaking openly about them. And, he shares his own reasons for studying depression and suicide, and how he has b…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 101: An Outside Perspective on Implicit Bias
1:15:31
1:15:31
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:15:31
Alexa and Yoel discuss the much trodden topic of implicit bias from a less trodden perspective: that of the general public. Offering insight into the public's views is a paper by Jeffrey Yen, Kevin Durrheim, and Romin Tafarodi, which explores public thinking about the implicit association test (IAT) through an examination of the New York Times comm…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 100: What Happened at Perspectives on Psychological Science?
1:24:28
1:24:28
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:24:28
Yoel and special guest Rachel Hartman discuss the recent ouster of Klaus Fiedler, the former Editor in Chief of the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science, over allegations of racism and abuse of power. They try to untangle a complicated story of peer review gone awry, explain the dueling open letters condemning and supporting Fiedler, and c…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 99: Is MTurk Too Good To Be True?
1:03:09
1:03:09
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:03:09
In a recent article, psychologists Webb and Tangney document their experience collecting psychology data online using Amazon's crowdsourcing platform MTurk. Alarmingly, the authors conclude that ultimately only 2.6% of their sample was valid data from human beings. Yoel and Alexa weigh in on these findings, discussing what researchers can reasonabl…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 98: Inspired Science (with Spencer Greenberg)
1:10:51
1:10:51
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:10:51
Yoel and Alexa are joined by Spencer Greenberg, founder of the behavioral science startup incubator Spark Wave and host of the Clearer Thinking podcast. He describes how he became fascinated with psychology and behavior change, and how he's been working to provide empirically-backed strategies for everday tasks, like making decisions or forming hab…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 97: Getting Into Grad School
57:49
57:49
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
57:49
With grad school application deadlines around the corner, Alexa and Yoel discuss how, exactly, that process works. Big picture, they talk about their goals in selecting graduate students to work on their labs, and whether they've gotten good at the process. They also examine typical application requirements - including recommendation letters, perso…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 96: So, What Do You Do?
1:12:14
1:12:14
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:12:14
Yoel and Alexa discuss a recent paper, written by Hughes, Srivastava, Leszko, and Condon, that created and validated a new index of "occupational prestige." The index is intended to provide a tool to measure the third component of socioeconomic status, alongside income and education. The cohosts consider how occupational prestige might lead to diff…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 95: What are Teachers Good For? (with Paul Bloom)
1:07:19
1:07:19
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:07:19
Paul Bloom joins Yoel and Alexa to talk about the glamour and humiliation of teaching psychology at the college level. They discuss how they've changed their approaches to teaching over the years, and whether they've become more skilled or more out of touch (or both). Alexa shares her experiences teaching about morality and evolution to a predomina…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 94: Individualism, Interdependence, and Student Loans
59:04
59:04
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
59:04
Inspired by a recent Atlantic article ("The Myth of Independent American Families" by Stephanie H. Murray) Alexa and Yoel consider what it means to live in an indiviualistic society. At an abstract level, they discuss different visions for interdependence, from communes to church communities to welfare states. On a more personal note, they reflect …
…
continue reading
1
Episode 93: Facing a Social Media Mob (with Stefan Uddenberg)
1:14:55
1:14:55
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:14:55
Yoel and Alexa are joined by Stefan Uddenberg, a social perception researcher and author of the paper "Deep Models of Superficial Face Judgments." This paper was the focus of a previous episde - "A Face for Podcasting" - in which the co-hosts discussed the research, and the resulting controversy. Now, Stefan offers a new, insider perspective. He be…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 92: Should SPSP Stay Out of It?
1:13:55
1:13:55
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:13:55
As the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) starts gearing up for their 2023 conference, Alexa and Yoel debate some of the organization's recent efforts to be more anti-racist and politically engaged. First, the co-hosts discuss debate over moving the conference from its originally scheduled location (Atlanta, Georgia) due to the st…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 91: Decriminalizing Mental Illness
1:21:39
1:21:39
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:21:39
Yoel and Alexa chat with Jennifer Cox and Lauren Kois, co-directors of the Southern Behavioral Health and Law Initiative. Established in 2020, the initiative was created to address the dearth of mental health resources for people who become involved with the legal system. Jennifer and Lauren walk our co-hosts through common scenarios that can occur…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 90: Freelance Kinkology (with Aella)
1:26:01
1:26:01
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:26:01
Independent researcher Aella joins Yoel and Alexa to talk about her experiences doing freelance social science. Their discussion touches on some far-ranging topics, from the upsides of Twitter microfame to the humbling experience of questioning one's faith. At one point, they consider the compromises - good and bad - that come from catering to one'…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 89: What's Wrong with Social Media?
1:23:09
1:23:09
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:23:09
Mickey returns with the hot takes you know and love. He joins Yoel and Alexa to discuss Jonathan Haidt's recent Atlantic article, "Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid." Haidt claims the answer is social media, but the cohosts aren't fully convinced. To shed a bit more light on the matter, they turn to an article by Amy …
…
continue reading
1
Episode 88: Many Many Labs
1:14:07
1:14:07
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:14:07
Earlier this year, the last of five "Many Labs" projects was accepted for publication at Collabra: Psychology, representating the culmination of a nearly-decade long series of multi-lab replication efforts. In this episode, Alexa and Yoel consider what they've learned from Many Labs 1 through 5, including insights about replication, expertise, and …
…
continue reading
1
Episode 87: The Distracting Nature of Nudges
1:11:14
1:11:14
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:11:14
Originating within the behavioral sciences, "nudging" has received attention as a way to achieve broad societal change by promoting small, individual adjustments. We're told, for instance, that if we all do our part reduce our carbon footprints we can stave off climate change. In today's episode, Yoel and Alexa consider a critique of "nudging" offe…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 86: A Face For Podcasting
1:05:00
1:05:00
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:05:00
Yoel and Alexa discuss a recent study that examines the facial features that people perceive as "smart," "dorky," "trustworthy," or a number of other traits. The study quickly captured a lot of attention, eliciting both fascination and anger. The cohosts turn to Twitter, and to Alexa's undergraduate students, to attempt to gain a deeper understandi…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 85: People Dealing With the Pandemic Pretty Well, Study Finds
1:07:33
1:07:33
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:07:33
Originally, Yoel and Alexa set out to discuss a study examining stress and decision-making during the pandemic. However, they get sidetracked by the ways that data are packaged - first by APA, and then by NPR - into a newsworthy account that may not tell the whole story. They identify ways in which the summary statements and headlines may exaggerat…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 84: Check Your Values?
1:08:49
1:08:49
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:08:49
Alexa and Yoel fight some more, this time over whether or not science should be value free. They consider a position taken by W. E. B. Du Bois, who argued that social change was only possible if scientists focused solely on finding truth. In the process, they consider whether scientists should ever keep findings to themselves, and discuss the merit…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 83: Grand Challenges
1:15:59
1:15:59
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:15:59
Yoel and Alexa discuss the "grand challenges" of psychological science, as identified in a recent survey of APS members. While usually nauseatingly agreeable, the two find many points of contention when it comes to psychology's shortcomings - from the kinds of diversity worth wanting to the value of decolonizing your syllabus. In the end, they make…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 82: Psychology Worth Knowing
1:15:27
1:15:27
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:15:27
Yoel and Alexa embrace their credulous sides and consider concepts from psychology that have importance for people in their private and public lives. Each of us lists the three social psychological ideas that we think are most relevant to people's lives - the kinds of things we would teach if we could give just one lecture. There are areas of conse…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 81: Against Retribution
1:10:42
1:10:42
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:10:42
Alexa moonlights as a guest and answers Yoel's questions about her recent paper, in which she argues that the criminal justice system should abandon retribution. Alexa claims that when we ask if someone is blameworthy, we are asking social scientific questions: Were they rational? Were they being coerced? Were they acting out of character? We discu…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 80: The C-Word (with Julia Rohrer)
1:26:31
1:26:31
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:26:31
Personality psychologist and methodologist Julia Rohrer joins the show to talk about causal claims, strategic ambiguity, and how tough it is to tell what empirical claims many psychology papers are making. To illustrate, we subject Yoel's first paper, "Conservatives are more easily disgusted than liberals," to some vigorous post-publication peer re…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 79: All About Authenticity
1:21:18
1:21:18
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:21:18
Alexa and Yoel talk authenticity. What is it? Is it good to have it? And why does Alexa score higher on it than Yoel? We talk about a draft paper examining how people infer authenticity in themselves and others, and a recently-published paper suggesting that supposedly highly authentic people might just be motivated to present themselves that way. …
…
continue reading
1
Episode 78: Meehl on Theory
1:08:58
1:08:58
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:08:58
Alexa and Yoel are back with more amateur philosophy of science. This time, we do a deep dive into a paper by the legendary Paul Meehl: "Appraising and Amending Theories: The Strategy of Lakatosian Defense and Two Principles that Warrant It." What can this classic paper tell us about how to do better research? We also talk about lactose, tandem bic…
…
continue reading
Myrto Mylopolous Myrto is an Associate Professor in Philosophy and Cognitive Science at Carleton University in Canada. She works on a number of topics, including the relation between agency and consciousness, skills and intentions and motor representations. Her work has appeared in prestigious philosophy and cognitive science journals, including Ph…
…
continue reading
Michael Inzlicht. Michael is research excellence faculty scholar at the University of Toronto, with appointments in the Department of Psychology and in the Rotman School of Management. He's published more than 100 peer reviewed journal articles and book chapters, and he's edited two books. His work has been featured in media outlets around the worl…
…
continue reading
Michael Bratman. Michael is Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University, where he is also the U. G. and Abbie Birch Durfee Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences. He's the author of seven books, including the forthcoming Shared and Institutional Agency: Toward a Planning Theory of Human Organization. Michael has received many, many, …
…
continue reading
Luca Ferrero. Luca is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California at Riverside. He's published extensively in the Philosophy of Action and Meta-Ethics, and he's the editor of the forthcoming Routledge Handbook for the Philosophy of Agency.
…
continue reading
Kevin Timpe. Kevin is the William H. Jellema Chair of Christian Philosophy at Calvin College. He's the author and editor of one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven books, including Free Will: Sourcehood and its Alternatives, Arguing about Religion, Free Will and Theism, Virtues and Vices, among others. His most recent book…
…
continue reading
Jennifer Morton. Jennifer is Presidential Penn Compact Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania. She's a senior fellow at the Center for Ethics and Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her book, Moving Up Without Losing Your Way: The Ethical Costs of Upward Mobility, has been awarded the Frederick W. Ness Boo…
…
continue reading
Alfred Mele. Al is the William H. And Lucyle T. Werkmeister Professor of Philosophy at Florida State University. He's the author of a dozen books including Irrationality, Springs of Action, Motivation and Agency and Manipulated Agents: A Window Into Moral Responsibility, as well as over 150 articles. His work addresses central issues about human ag…
…
continue reading
We tend to think of ourselves as not just passive creatures at the mercy of the world, but as active as agents who can at least sometimes direct our own lives. This idea, the idea of our agency, is both intriguing and far reaching. To open today's episode, we've asked our guests to give us a brief characterization of how they define human agency. W…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 77: Against Method?
1:14:38
1:14:38
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:14:38
Alexa and Yoel tackle Paul Feyerabend, the wild man of philosophy of science. What can we learn from his "anything goes" argument for methodological anarchy? We go deep on the first five chapters of Feyerabend's most famous work, "Against Method," and discuss his (maybe not entirely serious) arguments for extreme theory proliferation, ignoring the …
…
continue reading
1
Episode 76: Preregistration (What is it Good For)
1:07:43
1:07:43
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:07:43
Alexa and Yoel talk about objections to preregistration. Does preregistration imply that researchers can't be trusted? Does it mean that they can't use their best judgment? When might preregistration be unhelpful? We also discuss researcher degrees of freedom in a recent paper testing Cardi B's maxim that "hoes don't get cold." Plus: ketchup on ice…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 75: Beyond Experiments
1:07:01
1:07:01
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:07:01
Alexa and Yoel talk about a paper purporting to show that winning the Nobel Prize increases your lifespan. In the process, they dip their toes into non-experimental causal inference and discuss whether there is a taboo in psychology about drawing causal conclusions from non-experimental data. Plus, Yoel does his best to explain what an instrumental…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 74: Pleasurable Suffering (with Paul Bloom)
1:24:34
1:24:34
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:24:34
Paul Bloom joins us to talk about why we want to suffer. Sometimes it's a means to an end, but sometimes we desire it for its own sake. Among other things, we talk about mountain-climbing, whether you'd want to run just the end of the marathon, experience machines, BDSM, and parenting. Plus, a very special extra guest host, kidney donation, pronoun…
…
continue reading
1
Episode 73: We Need to Talk About Fraud (with Joe Simmons)
1:22:08
1:22:08
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai
1:22:08
Yoel and Alexa are joined by Joe Simmons to talk about fraud. We go in-depth on a recent high-profile fraud case, but we also talk about scientific fraud more generally: how common is it, how do you detect it, and what can we do to prevent it? Special Guest: Joe Simmons. Links: Drav India Session Ale Milkshake IPA - Microbrasserie Vox Populi A-OK I…
…
continue reading