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Research&Stories – Psychology – methods of understanding and development

51 Episodes
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I today’s episode, I share an interview that I conducted with Dr. Victor Ottati, who is a professor at Loyola University Chicago. The focus of the interview is an article published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, which is titled “When self-perceptions of expertise increase closed-minded cognition: The earned dogmatism effect.” The abstract for […]
The post Dr. Victor Ottati on “When self-perceptions of expertise increase closed-minded cognition: The earned dogmatism effect” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I share an interview that I conducted with Dr. Aleksandra Cichocka, who is a lecturer at the University of Kent. The interview is focused on an article published in Social Psychological and Personality Science, which is titled “Does Self-Love or Self-Hate Predict Conspiracy Beliefs? Narcissism, Self-Esteem, and the Endorsement of Conspiracy Theories.” The abstract for […]
The post Dr. Aleksandra Cichocka on “Does Self-Love or Self-Hate Predict Conspiracy Beliefs? Narcissism, Self-Esteem, and the Endorsement of Conspiracy Theories.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I share an interview that I conducted with Dr. Enrico Rubaltelli, who is an assistant professor at Padova. His research generally is focused on judgments and decision making. The focus of the interview was an article published in Judgment and Decision Making titled, “Moral investing: Psychological motivations and implications.” The abstract for the […]
The post Dr. Enrico Rubaltelli on “Moral investing: Psychological motivations and implications.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I interview Dr. Don Moore, who is a professor at Berkeley. His research interests focus on overconfidence, and judgments and decision-making. Dr. Don Moore has previously been interviewed, and that interview can be found at Methodologyforpsychology.org/moore. The focus of this interview is on a research article titled, “Correspondence Bias in Performance Evaluation: Why […]
The post Dr. Don Moore on “Correspondence Bias in Performance Evaluation: Why Grade Inflation Works” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I interview Dr. Don Moore, who is a professor at Berkeley. His research interests focus on overconfidence, and judgments and decision-making. The focus of the interview is on two research articles. The first is “Psychological Strategies for Winning a Geopolitical Forecasting Tournament,” and the second is “Confidence Calibration in a Multi-year Geopolitical […]
The post Dr. Don Moore on “Psychological Strategies for Winning a Geopolitical Forecasting Tournament.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In this episode, I speak with Dr. Shahzeen Attari, who is an Assistant Professor at the School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA) at Indiana University Bloomington. Her research focuses on human behavior and resource use. The focus of the interview was an article published in Judgment and Decision Making , titled “Reasons for cooperation […]
The post Dr. Shahzeen Attari on “Reasons for cooperation and defection in real-world social dilemmas” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Edward Royzman about his article titled “The curious tale of Julie and Mark: Unraveling the moral dumbfounding effect.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, or send me a message by going to methodologyforpsychology.org/contact. Thank you for […]
The post Dr. Edward Royzman on “The curious tale of Julie and Mark: Unraveling the moral dumbfounding effect.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In this episode, I speak with Dr. Piercarlo Valdesolo, who is an assistant professor of psychology at Claremont McKenna College. His research interests include the influence of emotion on moral judgments and decision making. The focus of the interview was an article published in Psychological Science, titled “Awe, Uncertainty, and Agency Detection.” The abstract for the […]
The post Dr. Piercarlo Valdesolo on “Awe, Uncertainty, and Agency Detection.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In this episode, I speak with Dr. Larisa Heiphetz, who is a researcher at Columbia University. Her research interests include the development of social preferences, religious cognition, moral cognition, and judgments of the criminal justice system. The focus of the interview was an article published in cognition, titled “In the name of God: How children and […]
The post Dr. Larisa Heiphetz on “In the name of God: How children and adults judge agents who act for religious versus secular reasons.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In this episode, I speak with Dr. Kimberly Rios, who is an assistant professor at Ohio University in Athens in the department of Psychology. Her work involves the topic of how individuals respond to threats to their self-concepts, interpersonal relationships, or group identities, which includes an interest in social uncertainty, social exclusion, and responses to outgroup […]
The post Dr. Kimberly Rios on “Negative Stereotypes Cause Christians to Underperform in and Disidentify With Science” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In this episode, I speak with Dr. Daniel DeCaro about his article titled “Synergistic effects of voting and enforcement on internalized motivation to cooperate in a resource dilemma.” Dr. DeCaro is an assistant professor at the University of Louisville in the department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. The basic idea discussed in the episode is […]
The post Dr. Daniel DeCaro on “Synergistic effects of voting and enforcement on internalized motivation to cooperate in a resource dilemma.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Dr. Derek Koehler about his article titled “On the psychology of self-prediction: Consideration of situational barriers to intended actions.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, or send me a message by going to methodologyforpsychology.org/contact. Thank […]
The post Dr. Derek Koehler and “On the psychology of self-prediction: Consideration of situational barriers to intended actions.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Erik Duhaime about his article titled “Is the call to prayer a call to cooperate? A field experiment on the impact of religious salience on prosocial behavior.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, or send […]
The post Erik Duhaime on “Is the call to prayer a call to cooperate? A field experiment on the impact of religious salience on prosocial behavior” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Zachary Michaelson about his article titled “Biases in choices about fairness: Psychology and economic inequality.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, or send me a message by going to methodologyforpsychology.org/contact. Thank you for listening. Suggested Resources […]
The post Zachary Michaelson on “Biases in choices about fairness: Psychology and economic inequality” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Dr. Michael Lee about his article titled “Evidence for and against a simple interpretation of the less-is-more effect.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, or send me a message by going to methodologyforpsychology.org/contact. Thank you for […]
The post Dr. Michael Lee on “Evidence for and against a simple interpretation of the less-is-more effect” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I speak with Dr. Michael Mai about his article “The Gray Side of Creativity: Exploring the Role of Activation in the Link Between Creative Personality and Unethical Behavior.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, […]
The post Dr. Ke Michael Mai on “The Gray Side of Creativity: Exploring the Role of Activation in the Link Between Creative Personality and Unethical Behavior” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I speak with Matthew Fisher about his article “Searching for Explanations: How the Internet Inflates Estimates of Internal Knowledge.” Matthew is a 5th year graduate student at Yale University, and his research interests include “how people make sense of a complex world with incomplete knowledge and the inherent tradeoffs of the strategies they use […]
The post Matthew Fisher on “Searching for Explanations: How the Internet Inflates Estimates of Internal Knowledge” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
In today’s episode, I speak with Dr. Kyle Scherr about his article “Midnight Confessions: The Effect of Chronotype Asynchrony on Admissions of Wrongdoing.” Kyle Scherr is a faculty member at Central Michigan Univerity in the psychology department. The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share […]
The post Dr. Kyle Scherr on “Midnight Confessions: The Effect of Chronotype Asynchrony on Admissions of Wrongdoing” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Dr. Nicholas Christenfeld about his article “Seeing the other side Perspective taking and the moderation of extremity.” The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. To share comments or questions, please share them in the comment section below, or send me a message by going to methodologyforpsychology.org/contact. Thank you for listening. […]
The post Dr. Nicholas Christenfeld on “Seeing the other side: Perspective taking and the moderation of extremity.” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.
I speak with Mallory Kidwell about the article “Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science,” which was published in Science in the fall of 2015. The abstract for the article is provided below for your convenience. Mallory Kidwell works as a Project Coordinator for the Center for Open Science. To share comments or questions, please share them […]
The post Mallory Kidwell on “Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science” appeared first on The Methodology for Psychology Podcast - Social Psychology - Cognitive Psychology - Experimental Psychology - Psychology of Religion.




