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Episodes

Episode 58: Pedestals and Guillotines
Jan. 17, 2017

Episode 58: Pedestals and Guillotines

It's inauguration season, which means balls, parades, and celebrations. We may love the pomp and circumstance, but there's another, darker side to our psychology, too. Whether we like the new president or not, human beings have a strange and contradictory relationship with power and celebrity. We i…

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Episode 57: Slanguage
Jan. 10, 2017

Episode 57: Slanguage

Young people have always used language in new and different ways, and it has pretty much always driven older people crazy. But the linguist John McWhorter says all the "likes" and LOLs are part of a natural – and inevitable –evolution of language. This week on Hidden Brain, why language can't "sit …

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Episode 56: Getting Unstuck
Jan. 3, 2017

Episode 56: Getting Unstuck

At one time or another, many of us feel stuck: in the wrong job, the wrong relationship, the wrong city – the wrong life. Psychologists and self-help gurus have all kinds of advice for us when we feel rudderless. This week on Hidden Brain, we explore a new idea, from an unlikely source: Silicon Val…

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Encore of Episode 15: Loss and Renewal
Dec. 27, 2016

Encore of Episode 15: Loss and Renewal

Maya Shankar was well on her way to an extraordinary career as a violinist when an injury closed that door. This week, we look at how she wound up at the top of another field: the social sciences.

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Encore of Episode 32: The Scientific Process
Dec. 20, 2016

Encore of Episode 32: The Scientific Process

There is a replication "crisis" in psychology: many findings simply do not replicate. Some critics take this as an indictment of the entire field — perhaps the best journals are only interested in publishing the "sexiest" findings, or universities are pressuring their faculty to publish more. But t…

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Episode 55: Snooki and the Handbag
Dec. 13, 2016

Episode 55: Snooki and the Handbag

Look down at what you're wearing. You picked out that blue shirt, right? And those boots — you decided on those because they're warm, didn't you? Well, maybe not. Researcher Jonah Berger says, we tend to be pretty good at recognizing how influences like product placement and peer pressure affect ot…

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Episode 54: Panic in the Streets
Dec. 6, 2016

Episode 54: Panic in the Streets

It sounds like the plot of a movie: police discover the body of a young man who's been murdered. The body tests positive for a deadly infectious disease. Authorities trace the killing to a gang. They race to find gang members linked to the murder... who may also be incubating the virus. This week o…

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Episode 53: Embrace the Chaos
Nov. 29, 2016

Episode 53: Embrace the Chaos

Many of us spend lots of time and energy trying to get organized. We KonMari our closets, we strive for inbox zero, we tell our kids to clean their rooms, and our politicians to clean up Washington. But Economist Tim Harford says, maybe we should embrace the chaos. His new book is Messy: The Power …

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Episode 52: Losing Face
Nov. 22, 2016

Episode 52: Losing Face

It happens to all of us: someone recognizes you on the street, calls you by name, and says hello... and you have no idea who that person is. Researchers say this struggle to read other faces is common. This week on Hidden Brain, super-recognizers, and the rest of us.

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Episode 51: What Happened?
Nov. 15, 2016

Episode 51: What Happened?

On the morning after election day, pundits, pollsters, politicians, and citizens woke up feeling stunned. All signs, all year, had been pointing towards a victory for Democrat Hillary Clinton. So, what happened? We ask one of the few people who didn't get it wrong: the historian Allan Lichtman.

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Encore of Episode 27: Losing Alaska
Nov. 8, 2016

Encore of Episode 27: Losing Alaska

We didn't hear very much about climate change during this election cycle — and social science research might give us some insight as to why not. This week, an encore of one of our favorite episodes about why it's so hard for us to wrap our heads around climate change.

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Episode 50: Broken Windows
Nov. 1, 2016

Episode 50: Broken Windows

In the early 1980s, a couple of researchers wrote an article in The Atlantic that would have far reaching consequences. The article introduced a new idea about crime and policing. It was called Broken Windows. The idea was simple: A broken window is a sign of a neglected community, and a neglected …

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Episode 49: Filthy Rich
Oct. 25, 2016

Episode 49: Filthy Rich

Several years ago, sociologist Brooke Harrington decided to explore the secret lives of billionaires. What she found, she said, shocked her.

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Episode 48: Men: 44, Women: 0
Oct. 18, 2016

Episode 48: Men: 44, Women: 0

A century after women won the vote in the US, we still see very few of them in leadership roles. Researchers say women are trapped in a catch-22 known as "the double bind." Note: an early version of this episode incorrectly stated that Carol Moseley Braun was the first African-American U.S. Senator…

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Episode 47: Give Me Your Tired...
Oct. 11, 2016

Episode 47: Give Me Your Tired...

Our airwaves are filled with debates about migrants, refugees, and undocumented immigrants... Who should be in the United States, who shouldn't, and who should decide? Immigration is, without question, a flash point in this year's political debates. It's an issue that seems to get to the core of wh…

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Episode 46: Blessings in Disguise?
Oct. 4, 2016

Episode 46: Blessings in Disguise?

We have lots of ways to describe the good that can come from bad: a blessing in disguise, a silver lining — but what if the bad thing was truly awful? This week on Hidden Brain, framing and re-framing a tragedy.

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Episode 45: What Are The Odds?
Sept. 27, 2016

Episode 45: What Are The Odds?

This week on Hidden Brain, coincidences. Why they're not quite as magical as they seem... and the reasons we can't help but search for meaning in them anyway.

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Trailer: Hidden Brain 2.0
Sept. 22, 2016

Trailer: Hidden Brain 2.0

We have an anniversary to celebrate. We've been bringing you Hidden Brain for a year now, and we are so glad and thankful you've come along with us. We've learned a lot about what you like, and what we like. Specifically, deep dives into stories or topics that reveal something true about human beha…

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Update: #AirbnbWhileBlack
Sept. 20, 2016

Update: #AirbnbWhileBlack

A few months ago, Hidden Brain investigated claims that Airbnb users were facing discrimination on the platform. Now, we bring you an update on the company's response.

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Episode 44: Our Politics, Our Parenting
Sept. 13, 2016

Episode 44: Our Politics, Our Parenting

In the midst of a rancorous election, we present a new theory to explain why the two sides of the aisle seem irreconcilable sometimes.

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Episode 43: The Perils of Power
Sept. 6, 2016

Episode 43: The Perils of Power

We've all heard the old adage that "power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely," but psychologist Dacher Keltner at UC Berkeley has found evidence to prove it. His book is The Power Paradox: How We Gain and Lose Influence.

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Encore of Episode 21: Stroke of Genius
Aug. 30, 2016

Encore of Episode 21: Stroke of Genius

Derek Amato wasn't born a musical savant. He became one—almost instantly—after hitting his head on the bottom of a swimming pool.

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Episode 42: Decide Already!
Aug. 23, 2016

Episode 42: Decide Already!

This week, Harvard researcher Dan Gilbert tells us why we're bad at predicting our future happiness, how that affects our decision making, and why we are actually happier after making a decision that feels irrevocable.

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Encore of Episode 11: Forgery
Aug. 16, 2016

Encore of Episode 11: Forgery

This week on Hidden Brain, we explore real and fake, from fine art to fine wine. Shankar speaks with Noah Charney, author of The Art of Forgery, about why art forgers are compelled to spend their lives copying the great masters, and why so many of them want to get caught. Also this week: why we lov…

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