Yuck! What disgusts us and why, with Paul Rozin, PhD

Yuck! What disgusts us and why, with Paul Rozin, PhD

“Disgusting” is a flexible word – it could describe everything from a putrid smell to your least-favorite food to a behavior you find immoral. But what does it really mean to be disgusted? Paul Rozin, PhD, talks about where disgust comes from, why some people are more easily disgusted than others, universal triggers of disgust, why the foods we consider disgusting vary by culture, why is gross-out humor can be funny, and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Episoder(422)

What is it like to be face blind? With Joe DeGutis, PhD, and Sadie Dingfelder

What is it like to be face blind? With Joe DeGutis, PhD, and Sadie Dingfelder

After a lifetime of thinking that she was just a little bit bad at remembering people, Sadie Dingfelder learned that she had prosopagnosia, a disorder more colloquially known as face blindness. Harvar...

27 Jan 202141min

Positive Psychology in a Pandemic, with Martin Seligman, PhD

Positive Psychology in a Pandemic, with Martin Seligman, PhD

Over the past 20 years, the field of positive psychology has grown from a fledgling idea to a worldwide movement. Positive psychology is the scientific study of the strengths that enable individuals a...

20 Jan 202148min

Why people believe in conspiracy theories, with Karen Douglas, PhD

Why people believe in conspiracy theories, with Karen Douglas, PhD

This past year, COVID-19 and the U.S. elections have provided fertile ground for conspiracy theories—with sometimes disastrous consequences. Karen Douglas, PhD, of the University of Kent in the United...

13 Jan 202136min

How the Science of Habits Can Help Us Keep Our New Year’s Resolutions, with Wendy Wood, PhD

How the Science of Habits Can Help Us Keep Our New Year’s Resolutions, with Wendy Wood, PhD

Many of us are brimming with good intentions right now, determined to eat more healthily, get organized or fulfill our other New Year’s resolutions. But by February we’ll have reverted back to our old...

6 Jan 202134min

Encore: Why boredom is surprisingly interesting, with Erin Westgate, PhD

Encore: Why boredom is surprisingly interesting, with Erin Westgate, PhD

We’re taking a holiday break, so we’re revisiting one of our favorite episodes from this past year. Back in the spring we talked to University of Florida psychologist Erin Westgate about the surprisin...

30 Des 202041min

Why America's bitter politics are like a bad marriage, with Eli Finkel, PhD

Why America's bitter politics are like a bad marriage, with Eli Finkel, PhD

These days, Republicans and Democrats don't just disagree with each other's political opinions -- many view members of the other party as immoral and even abhorrent. Eli Finkel, PhD, a social psycholo...

16 Des 202027min

Exploring psychology’s colorful past, with Dr. Cathy Faye, PhD

Exploring psychology’s colorful past, with Dr. Cathy Faye, PhD

The simulated shock generator for Stanley Milgram’s famed studies on obedience, artifacts from the Stanford Prison Experiment, and a curious machine called a psychograph that promised to read your per...

2 Des 202033min

The Holiday Blues, with Elaine Rodino, PhD

The Holiday Blues, with Elaine Rodino, PhD

For many people, the holiday season can be a time of stress rather than joy even in the best of times. And this year, of course, the holidays will be different for everyone, as the coronavirus pandemi...

24 Nov 202017min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
tingenes-tilstand
rekommandert
jss
forskningno
vett-og-vitenskap-med-gaute-einevoll
sinnsyn
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
rss-rekommandert
rss-paradigmepodden
villmarksliv
rss-overskuddsliv
liberal-halvtime
rss-inn-til-kjernen-med-sunniva-rose
abels-tarn
tidlose-historier
fjellsportpodden
nordnorsk-historie
rss-zahid-ali-hjelper-deg
dekodet-2