What do we know about preventing gun violence? With Susan Sorenson, PhD

What do we know about preventing gun violence? With Susan Sorenson, PhD

Guns killed nearly 44,000 Americans in 2020, a higher number than in any other year in the past two decades. Meanwhile, a spate of mass shootings in the spring brought gun violence to the forefront of the national conversation again. Susan Sorenson, PhD, director of the Ortner Center on Violence and Abuse at the University of Pennsylvania, discusses what we know about the causes and consequences of gun violence in the United States and whether research can offer any insight into how to prevent it. Listener Survey - https://www.apa.org/podcastsurvey Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Episoder(422)

Abortion and mental health, with Antonia Biggs, PhD

Abortion and mental health, with Antonia Biggs, PhD

Dozens of states are poised to outlaw or dramatically restrict abortion if the Supreme Court overturns its 1973 Roe v. Wade decision. Antonia Biggs, PhD, a social psychologist at the University of Cal...

15 Jun 202227min

How living with secrets can harm you, with Michael Slepian, PhD

How living with secrets can harm you, with Michael Slepian, PhD

We all keep secrets – on average, people have about 13 secrets at any one time, five of which they have never told another person. Psychologist Michael Slepian, PhD, of Columbia Business School, talks...

8 Jun 202225min

Can an app improve your health? With Gary Bennett, PhD

Can an app improve your health? With Gary Bennett, PhD

Digital interventions that promise to help you achieve your health and fitness goals are everywhere. But do these apps work and are they a useful public health tool? Gary Bennett, PhD, director of the...

1 Jun 202239min

Racism, racial discrimination and mental health, with Riana Elyse Anderson, PhD

Racism, racial discrimination and mental health, with Riana Elyse Anderson, PhD

The past two years have taken a heavy toll on the health, mental health and well-being of people of color, who have suffered disproportionately from the COVID-19 pandemic while also facing what some c...

25 Mai 202239min

What is dissociative identity disorder? With Bethany Brand, PhD

What is dissociative identity disorder? With Bethany Brand, PhD

Dissociative identity disorder – which many people recognize by its former name, multiple personality disorder – is one of Hollywood’s favorite psychology-related topics, with a decades-long history o...

18 Mai 202230min

Are we in a ‘loneliness pandemic’? With Louise Hawkley, PhD

Are we in a ‘loneliness pandemic’? With Louise Hawkley, PhD

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic scrambled our social connections, Americans were worried about an epidemic of loneliness. Louise Hawkley, PhD, principal research scientist at NORC at the University ...

11 Mai 202237min

Is technology killing empathy? With Sherry Turkle, PhD

Is technology killing empathy? With Sherry Turkle, PhD

Over the past couple of decades, our devices have become our constant companions. More and more, we live in a digital, virtual world. Dr. Sherry Turkle, MIT professor and founding director of the MIT ...

4 Mai 202243min

What psychology has to say about art, with Ellen Winner, PhD

What psychology has to say about art, with Ellen Winner, PhD

Art is universal – there has never been a human society without it. But we don’t always agree on what makes for good art, or even what makes something art at all. Ellen Winner, PhD, of Boston College,...

27 Apr 202242min

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