Stanford Psychology Podcast

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The student-led Stanford Psychology Podcast invites leading psychologists to talk about what’s on their mind lately. Join Eric Neumann, Anjie Cao, Kate Petrova, Bella Fascendini,  Joseph Outa and Julia Rathmann-Bloch as they chat with their guests about their latest exciting work. Every week, an episode will bring you new findings from psychological science and how they can be applied to everyday life. The opinions and views expressed in this podcast represent those of the speaker and not necessarily Stanford's. Subscribe at stanfordpsypod.substack.com. Let us hear your thoughts at stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com. Follow us on Twitter @StanfordPsyPod. Visit our website https://stanfordpsychologypodcast.com. Soundtrack: Corey Zhou (UCSD). Logo: Sarah Wu (Stanford)

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Recent Reviews
  • #HateTheUpdate
    Get a better mic!
    The contents are perfect but the audio recording is terrible. Also, it would be so much better if you guys could provide a transcript on Stanford psychology web.
  • thisisrhenickbame
    119 Bryan Brown
    “Never replace in-school education.” “The humanity of me as a teacher understanding the needs of my students is going to be the hardest thing to replicate… I can now provide my students a microscopic understanding of a phenomenon.” “Idea first, language second.” My heart leaped throughout this podcast. Professor Brown speaks to balance, insight and understanding. Thank you.
  • Freddyflinstone9752
    Great show
    Interesting guests, irreverent host.
  • pb&j sammie
    real knowledge + wisdom, engaging, life-relevant
    I found you via episode 69- in a word, fabulous (truly the right word, by the way). The professor is actuallu genial (and I use that word so infrequently), because he really embodies cross disciplinary and profound perspectives and knowledge as well as a sensitivity, nuance and humor that characterizes real intelligence and he in no way exudes that arid, merely cerebral accademia-speak that for me often betrays a lack of deeper, life-relevant, humanizing knowledge. The interviewer is equally expressive of those wonderful qualities of curiosity, vulnerability, and thirst for knowledge while integrating the personal quest for locating oneself in the world end finding wisdom. That's what's so strong about this episode and both of its interlocutors: they play with, explore, and share real conversation that embodies those lovely qualities and is therefore both exceptionally engaging as well as both intellectually and personally/spiritually enriching and relevant. Thank you for existing as a group and a project, and for sharing this podcast as a creative work which is a gift.
  • paungle
    Cialdini’s methods work
    I think the value of any podcast like this ultimately comes down to the ability of the interviewer to ask interesting questions and adapt their plan to in real time based on the answers from the guest. If you like psychological science and want to know more about what leading researchers in different researchers are doing, what they have learned along the way, and where they’re going next and why, I highly recommend this podcast. Great interviews about the latest research and thinking from some of the world’s most insightful psychologists.
  • lauren borchers
    The hosts ROCK!
    Highly informative and engaging podcast with engaging talks! 10/10 recommend.
  • The Page Master
    I love Psychology
    I am studying psychology in college and majoring in it. I love this podcast and the guest and psychologists that speak on it. Very informative and I really enjoy it thank you.
  • Sblanco01
    Recommend
    I enjoy listening to Eric interviewing the guests .
  • JGK1776
    Episode 15
    Appalling production value. There is a conversation going on in the background. Later there a squeaky sounds, possibly a bird. Do you have so little regard for your audience that you can’t be bothered to choose a quiet recording location?
  • Phyllis Robbins
    Who’s the audience?
    If the audience is intended for freshman psychology students as an introduction to psychology and and overview of method, perhaps it’s a good podcast. For the average consumer (or even an interested, we’ll educated amateur like me) it’s dry as a bone and dull as an old knife. Nothing interesting or useful.
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