Technology is changing how we talk to each other, with Jeff Hancock, PhD
Listen now
Description
This past year, technology has sometimes felt like the glue that’s kept many of our relationships alive. Jeff Hancock, PhD, discusses how this is affecting human communication, including whether people are more likely to lie online, whether the versions of ourselves that we present on social media are authentic, how artificial intelligence infiltrates our text messages, why video calls exhaust us more than in-person conversations, and more. Listener survey - https://www.apa.org/podcastsurvey
More Episodes
Published 05/08/24
Sesame Street has entertained and educated generations of children. Developmental psychologist Rosemarie Truglio, PhD, Sesame Workshop’s senior vice president of curriculum and content, talks about why the show has a new focus on young children’s emotional well-being; how Sesame Street translates...
Published 05/08/24
The eerie sensation of “déjà vu” -- feeling a strong sense of familiarity in a new place or situation -- is one of memory’s strangest tricks. Researcher Chris Moulin, PhD, of Grenoble Alpes University, talks about why déjà vu happens; why both déjà vu and its lesser-known opposite, jamais vu, may...
Published 05/01/24