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Psychology Behind Political Polarization w/ Dr. Jay Van Bavel

Psychology Behind Political Polarization w/ Dr. Jay Van Bavel

Episode 293 Published 1 month ago
Description

You can watch two people look at the same video of the Minneapolis shooting and come to completely opposite conclusions about what happened. Why? Because their brains — literally — were looking at different parts of the screen. That's selective perception. And once Dr. Jay Van Bavel explained it to me, I couldn't stop seeing it everywhere. In my feed. In my family. In myself.

Jay is one of the top 1% of researchers in the world — not my words, that's Clarivate — and a professor of psychology and neuroscience at NYU. His research has been cited by the US Supreme Court, the Senate, and the World Health Organization. And in this conversation, he did not let me off the hook. Neither will you.

We went deep on why our brains are not built for social media, how AI is becoming a full-time confirmation bias machine, what's actually happening to democracy right now, and — I promise there's a reason to keep listening — one genuinely hopeful hack backed by hard data that can lower your polarization by 25%.

In this episode, you'll learn:

  • Why two people can watch the exact same video and reach opposite conclusions — and it's not about intelligence or bad faith
  • How AI chatbots are 50% more sycophantic than actual humans — and what that's doing to your relationships and your politics
  • What the research actually says about Trump's approval drop and the role of "apolitical" influencers in shifting minds
  • The one social media move backed by a clinical study that can reduce your polarization by 25% in a single month — and keep it lower for a full year

Rather watch on YouTube? https://youtu.be/-upTCa6s7oc

Resources & Links Mentioned:

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