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  • 179 - Cynthia Osborne: Translating Evidence Into Early Childhood Policy
    2026/07/09

    Adani chats with Cynthia Osborne, Professor at Vanderbilt University and Executive Director of the Prenatal-to-3 Policy Impact Center. Prof. Osborne’s work focuses on translating developmental science into effective, evidence-based policies for families and young children in the U.S. We discuss what the field of Early Childhood Policy entails, the ongoing work that Prof. Osborne and the Impact Center conduct, and why the first three years of childhood are so critical. Prof. Osborne also tells us about her path into her current work, how she built the Impact Center’s wonderful team, and what advice she would pass on to students seeking to bridge research and policy!

    Cynthia Osborne’s page: https://peabody.vanderbilt.edu/bio/cynthia-osborne/
    Cynthia Osborne’s publications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=tRc8EmMAAAAJ
    Prenatal-to-3 Policy Impact Center: https://pn3policy.org/
    Policy Impact Calculator: https://pn3policy.org/policy-impact-calculator/
    Prenatal-to-3 State Policy Roadmap: https://pn3policy.org/pn-3-state-policy-roadmap-2025/

    Adani’s website: https://stanford.edu/~aabutto/
    Adani’s Bluesky @adani

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you thought of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    53 分
  • 178 - Julia Nolte: Why We Avoid Difficult Decisions
    2026/06/26

    This week, Enna chats with Dr. Julia Nolte, Assistant Professor of Economic Psychology at Tilburg University. Julia’s research examines how information management, risk perception, and decision-making change across adulthood. She is particularly interested in what keeps people, especially older adults, from making well-informed and high-quality decisions, and how we can better support people in making choices that align with their goals and values.

    In our conversation, Julia discusses how her early interest in theater sparked her interest in psychology, how she came to study aging and decision-making, and what her work can teach us about information avoidance, decision-making, and the very human challenge of choosing between imperfect options.


    Julia’s Website: https://www.julianolte.org/

    Julia’s X: @Dr_Julia_Nolte

    Julia’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/julia-nolte-8aa02b158/

    Julia’s Paper: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0361073X.2025.2473849


    Enna’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ennayuxuanchen/

    Enna’s X: @EnnaYuxuanChen


    Podcast Contact: stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

    Podcast Twitter: @StanfordPsyPod

    Podcast Substack: https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Podcast Contact: stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com


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    1 時間 1 分
  • 177 - Alison Gopnik: How Can Understanding Childhood Help Us Build Better AI? (REAIR)
    2026/06/12

    In this re-air (but more timely than ever!) episode from 2021, Anjie chats with Alison Gopnik, Professor at the Department of Psychology and Affiliate Professor at Department of Philosophy at UC Berkeley. Alison is not only a great cognitive scientist and philosopher who has made many groundbreaking contributions to the field, but also a great science communicator. Alison authored multiple bestselling books, including The Scientist in the Crib, The Philosophical Baby, The Gardener, and the Carpenter. She also writes widely about cognitive science and psychology for multiple national outlets including the NYT, the Atlantic, and so on. In this episode, we discussed one of her recent review pieces on the role of childhood in solving the explore-exploit dilemma, a challenge to contemporary artificial intelligence.

    Alison's lab website: https://www.gopniklab.berkeley.edu/
    Alison's paper: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rstb.2019.0502
    Alison's Twitter: @AlisonGopnik

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you thought of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    41 分
  • 176 - Elizabeth Bonawitz: How to Have Fun While Studying How Children Learn so Much From so Little
    2026/05/30

    Adani chats with Elizabeth Bonawitz, Professor of Learning Sciences at Harvard Graduate School of Education. Elizabeth’s work focuses on basic theories of learning with the broader goal of informing educational practice. She uses computational, behavioral, and neural methods to study a broad variety of things within cognitive development, from children’s curiosity and belief revision to their exploration and play. We discuss Elizabeth’s view of cognitive development research and, most importantly, the secret formula behind her great academic paper titles and funny talks. Elizabeth also tells us about her path into science and what she’s most excited for next!

    Elizabeth’s lab page: https://ccdlab.hsites.harvard.edu/people/elizabeth-bonawitz
    Elizabeth’s publications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=MA7j1gkAAAAJ
    Susan Carey’s paper, ‘Science Education as Conceptual Change’: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0193-3973(99)00046-5

    Adani’s website: https://www.adaniabutto.com
    Adani’s Bluesky @adani

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you thought of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    46 分
  • 175 - Nicholas Epley: A Little More Social
    2026/05/14

    Nick Epley is the John Templeton Keller Distinguished Service Professor of Behavioral Science at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business. He studies social cognition—how thinking people think about other thinking people—to understand why smart people so routinely misunderstand each other. Nick is one of the “World’s Best 40 under 40 Business School Professors” by Poets and Quants. He just published his second book for a popular audience called "A Little More Social."


    In this episode, Eric and Nick talk about "undersociality," the key idea in his latest book. Are we being less social than is good for us? How can we learn to connect, especially when it feels effortful? Can we be too social as well? How can we learn more about ourselves when we connect with others? What are the methodological limitations of Nick's work?


    Book: https://sites.prh.com/a-little-more-social

    Nick's Website: https://www.nicholasepley.com/

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you think of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    56 分
  • 174 - Amit Goldenberg: Collective Emotions and Social Media (REAIR)
    2026/04/17

    In this reair episode from 2023, Eric chats with Amit Goldenberg, Assistant Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. Amit studies emotions in social interactions, for example in political contexts and on social media. He was a journalist and author before becoming an academic.

    In this episode, Eric and Amit talk about how emotions operate in groups. Do crowds easily go “mad”? What emotions spread faster in groups? Why are we drawn to people more politically extreme than us? How is social media shaping our emotions and political behavior? Finally, Amit shares his journey from being a journalist to being a psychologist at a business school.

    JOIN OUR SUBSTACK! Stay up to date with the pod and become part of the ever-growing community :) https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    If you found this episode interesting at all, consider leaving us a good rating! It just takes a second but will allow us to reach more people and make them excited about psychology.

    Links:

    Amit's paper on collective emotions
    Amit's paper on why we are attracted to morally extreme individuals
    Amit's website

    Eric's website
    Eric's Twitter @EricNeumannPsy

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you think of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    48 分
  • 173 - Juliana Schroeder: Mistakenly Seeking Solitude (REAIR)
    2026/04/03

    In this reair episode, Eric chats with Juliana Schroeder, Associate Professor in the Management of Organizations at Berkeley Haas. She studies how people think about the minds of other people, and how they are often wrong trying to understand what others are up to. Her work has been discussed in outlets ranging from Vice to The Atlantic and Forbes.

    Eric and Juliana review her exciting recent work on “undersociality.” Talking to other people is often meaningful, not just for extraverts, and yet we hesitate to talk to others, making overly pessimistic predictions about how awkward and unpleasant such interactions would be. This leads us to “mistakenly seek solitude.” Juliana discusses what we can do to motivate ourselves to talk to others more, why that is so beneficial, and why she herself struggles to do it.

    Links:

    Juliana's review paper on undersociality: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364661322000432?casa_token=KI1Vjeg9NKUAAAAA:aTAEDP2eF1ay3I0rGI74FHNW21s83r_KvXCQMvr5auCxaVnhEah82tbASwjzwfc-68D54q8Kc2E

    Juliana's key empirical paper: https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037/a0037323

    Juliana's Twitter

    Eric's website

    Eric's Twitter @EricNeumannPsy

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod

    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you think of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    47 分
  • 172 - Julia Chatain: Embodied Learning and Educational Technology in Mathematics and Beyond (REAIR)
    2026/03/20

    Adani chats with Dr. Julia Chatain, Senior Scientist at the Singapore-ETH Centre of ETH Zürich. Julia is a computer scientist and learning scientist responsible for building a new research program, “Future Embodied Learning Technologies” (FELT), focusing on exploring AI-powered embodied learning interventions to support low-progress learners and learners with special needs, both at the cognitive and the affective levels. Before that, she led the EduTech group at ETH Zürich, conducting Research and Development of educational technology through co-design with lecturers and students, with a focus on XR, AI-supported learning, and accessibility.

    In this episode, Adani and Julia discuss Julia’s recent work on embodied learning in mathematics, much of which was part of her doctoral research at ETH Zürich conducted with her advisors Prof. Manu Kapur and Prof. Robert Sumner. They also dive into her journey that led her to where she is now, and discuss what she is currently working on at the Singapore-ETH Centre and beyond!

    If you found this episode interesting at all, subscribe on our Substack and consider leaving us a good rating! It just takes a second but will allow us to reach more people and make them excited about psychology.

    Julia’s website: https://juliachatain.com/
    Julia’s paper on Grounding Graph Theory in Embodied Concreteness with VR: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000583039
    Singapore-ETH Centre’s website: https://sec.ethz.ch/
    Julia’s Twitter @JuliaChatain

    Adani’s website: https://www.adaniabutto.com/
    Adani’s Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/adani.bsky.social

    Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
    Podcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/

    Let us know what you thought of this episode, or of the podcast! :)
    stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com

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    38 分