How grieving changes the brain, with Mary-Frances O’Connor, PhD

How grieving changes the brain, with Mary-Frances O’Connor, PhD

Few of us will make it through life without losing someone we love. Mary-Frances O’Connor, PhD, of the University of Arizona, discusses howneuroscience can help us to better understand grief and resilience after loss, why grief is different from depression, effective therapy for grief, whether it’s possible to experience grief over the death of a celebrity, and how to support people when they are grieving. Links Mary-Frances O’Connor, PhD Speaking of Psychology Homepage Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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What COVID-19 is teaching us about the importance of smell, with Pamela Dalton, PhD

What COVID-19 is teaching us about the importance of smell, with Pamela Dalton, PhD

Many people around the world have lost their sense of smell this past year due to COVID-19. Before the pandemic, scientists had already begun to gain a deeper understanding of how sophisticated our se...

17 Mars 202134min

How We’re Coping One Year into the Pandemic, with Vaile Wright, PhD

How We’re Coping One Year into the Pandemic, with Vaile Wright, PhD

When the world shut down in March 2020, few people imagined how different things would still look one year later – or that more than 500,000 Americans and 2.5 million people around the world would die...

10 Mars 202124min

How meditation can help you live a flourishing life, with Richard Davidson, PhD

How meditation can help you live a flourishing life, with Richard Davidson, PhD

Meditation practices date back thousands of years and are a part of nearly every major religion. But it’s only in the past couple of decades that researchers have begun to use the tools of modern scie...

3 Mars 202131min

What studying twins can teach us about ourselves, with Nancy Segal, PhD

What studying twins can teach us about ourselves, with Nancy Segal, PhD

From movie plots to ad campaigns to viral videos, if they feature twins, they grab our attention every time. But it’s not only the general public who are fascinated with twins. Over many decades, twin...

24 Feb 202127min

How children's amazing brains shaped humanity, with Alison Gopnik, PhD

How children's amazing brains shaped humanity, with Alison Gopnik, PhD

As a species, humans have an extra-long childhood. And as any parent or caregiver knows, kids are expensive—they take an extraordinary amount of time, energy and resources to raise. So why do we have ...

17 Feb 202145min

The science of relationships, with Gary Lewandowski, PhD

The science of relationships, with Gary Lewandowski, PhD

For psychologists, romance, attraction and love are not just the stuff of poetry – they’re also a subject for research. What are the qualities of a successful relationship? Why do some relationships e...

10 Feb 202123min

Can “brain training” games sharpen your mental skills? With Aaron Seitz, PhD

Can “brain training” games sharpen your mental skills? With Aaron Seitz, PhD

Who among us wouldn’t want to improve his or her brain? To see better, to hear better or to improve one'​s memory? The field of brain training has attracted controversy as commercial companies have he...

3 Feb 202126min

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

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