Frank Keil, Professor of Psychology, Yale University

Title: The Curious Case of Clockwork Cognition: Why are Young Children so Interested in Mechanism?

 

Faculty Host: Dan Swingley

URL for more information: https://psychology.yale.edu/people/frank-keil

 This talk will be virtual and the zoom link and password will be sent on the day of the talk.

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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Lucy Brown, Clinical Professor, Department of Neurology, Einstein College of Medicine

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Title: Love and Desire:Survival Systems and Hormone Associations in the Brain

Faculty Host: Harvey Grill

URL for more info:

http://www.einstein.yu.edu/faculty/312/lucy-brown/

Jay Van Bavel, Associate Professor, New York University

Title: “For better or worse: The role of social identity in the Pandemic”

 

Abstract:

We are in the midst of one of the greatest global health crises in the past century. In the absence of a vaccine, the major public health response has required massive collective behavior change—especially at the national level. In this talk, I will present several recent studies on the role of social identity in the coronavirus pandemic. I will illustrate how social identity can both facilitate and impair collective action. These studies will draw on the movement of millions of cell phones tracking human mobility and vaccination records in the US as well as an international sample of health intentions in 67 countries. Together, these studies clarify how social identity might be leveraged effectively for global public health.

 Faculty Host: Joe Kable

URL for more information: https://as.nyu.edu/content/nyu-as/as/faculty/jay-van-bavel.html

 

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Location

 This talk will be virtual and the zoom link and password will be sent on the day of the talk

 

Steven Maier, Distinguished Professor, Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of Colorado

Title: Dissecting prefrontal circuits that mediate resilience

Faculty Host: Martin Seligman

URL for more information:

http://psych.colorado.edu/~mwlab/

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Sharad Goel, Professor of Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School

Title: Designing Equitable Algorithms For Criminal Justice And Beyond

Faculty Host: Coren Apicella and Sudeep Bhatia

URL for more information: https://5harad.com/

 

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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Henry L. Roediger, III., James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Psychology, Washington University in St. Louis

Title: "Making It Stick: The Science of Successful Learning."

Faculty Host: Michael Kahana

URL for more information:

http://psych.wustl.edu/memory/roediger.html

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Jenny Tung Associate Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University

Title: The Social Genome:Lessons From Our Primate Cousins

 

 

Faculty Host: Allyson Mackey

URL for more information:https://scholars.duke.edu/person/jenny.tung

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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Christopher F. Chabris, Professor, Geisinger Health System

Title: "The Invisible Gorilla: From the Classroom to the Real World, and Back Again"

Faculty Host: Barbara Mellers

URL for more information:

http://www.chabris.com/

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Matt Killingsworth, Ph.D, University of Pennsylvania

Title: Human happiness in high resolution: Insights from large-scale
         experience-sampling

Faculty Host: Michael Platt and Liz Brannon

URL for more information: http://www.mattkillingsworth.com/
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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Ido Erev, Professor, Industrial Engineering and Management, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology

Title: Anomalies, forecasts, and decision research during the big data revolution

Faculty Host: Sudeep Bhatia

URL for more information:

https://web.iem.technion.ac.il/en/people/userprofile/erev.html

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Joni Wallis, Professor, UC Berkeley

Title: Neuronal mechanisms of value-based decision-making: a brain-machine
         interface approach
 
Faculty Host: Michael Platt
 
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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Katherine Kinzler, Associate Professor, Development of Social Cognition Laboratory, Cornell University

Title: The development of language as a social category

Faculty Host: Robert Kurzban

URL for more information:

https://www.dsclabcornell.com/

 

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Daniel Hruschka, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Arizona State University

Title: Learning from "failures" when behavioral research crosses cultures

Faculty Host: Coren Apicella

URL for more information: 

http://hruschka.faculty.asu.edu/

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Location

NBS (425 S. University Ave.)

Dolores Albarracin, PhD, University of Pennsylvania

 

Title:"Communicating Behavior: Bottom-Up Processes of Social Influence" 
 

Abstract: This talk will begin with an analysis of interindividual processes of person perception and communication that unfold in brief verbal messages such as those on social media. I will describe experiments designed to establish whether merely alluding to behaviors can influence others to perform those behaviors. After discussing the processes underlying the effects of interindividual messages, I will present big data research by which effective interindividual messages can be elevated to authorities within communities. I will conclude with an analysis of the challenges of mobilizing authorities and describe field and experimental research on the bottom-up, social action mechanisms that inspire them to work toward solving problems in their communities.

 

 

 

URL for more information: https://www.nursing.upenn.edu/details/profiles.php?id=17310

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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Jean Decety, Professor, University of Chicago

Title: The role of empathy in morality: A force that can bind or blind us    

 Abstract: Empathy can be a strong motivation for moral behavior, but its influence can also have the opposite effect. People who are concerned for the well-being of others are more likely to help, care for them, and respect them. Empathy provides information for moral decision-making, which can supplement information based on reasoning, rational belief, and inference. However, empathy is limited and fragile, thus not always a reliable source of information in moral decision-making. We are more likely to empathize with those from similar social, racial and political circles. We respond more readily and with greater intensity to the suffering of individuals rather than groups. I will integrate knowledge from evolutionary theory, neuroscience, psychology, and behavioral economics to demonstrate that various social and situational factors unconsciously and rapidly modulate empathy. Decision-making guided by empathy alone is not optimal when dealing with large groups, people from our tribe, or anonymous persons. However, when combined with reasoning and deliberation, empathy can promote valuing the welfare of others.

 
Key-words: Empathy – Emotion – Evolution – Caring – Cognitive biases – Decision-making – Morality – Social psychology – Social neuroscience

Faculty Host: Becky Waller and Anna Jenkins

URL for more information: https://psychology.uchicago.edu/directory/jean-decety
 
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Location

NBS

425 S. University Avenue

Linda Smith, Distinguished Professor, Department of Psychological and Brain Science & the Program in Cognitive Science, Indiana University

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Location

Stiteler Hall B21 (208 South 37th Street)

Title: TBA

URL for more info: 

http://www.iub.edu/~cogdev/