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Unraveling Bias in the Brain | Emily Falk & Emile Bruneau | TEDxPenn 

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How can we unravel the conflicting biases in our brain to work towards a more just and peaceful world? In this talk, Dr. Emily Falk honors Dr. Emile Bruneau's work at Penn's Neuroscience & Conflict lab, describing the opportunity to look closer into our unconscious biases, question them, and face discomfort to make a change in our communities and beyond. Emily Falk is a Professor of Communication, Psychology, and Marketing at the University of Pennsylvania, Director of Penn's Communication Neuroscience Lab and a Distinguished Fellow of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Falk is an expert in the science of attitude and behavior change. Her research uses tools from psychology, neuroscience and communication to examine what makes messages persuasive, why and how ideas spread and what helps people get on the same page when communicating. Her work has been widely covered in the popular press in the U.S. and abroad (e.g., New York Times, Washington Post, BBC, Forbes, Scientific American and others), and she has consulted for and collaborated with major corporations, NGOs and government groups. Her research has been recognized by numerous awards, including early career awards from the International Communication Association, the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Attitudes Division, a Fulbright grant, and Social and Affective Neuroscience Society, a DARPA Young Faculty Award, the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award. She was named a Rising Star by the Association for Psychological Science. She received her bachelor’s degree in Neuroscience from Brown University, and her Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of California, Los Angeles. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

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6 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 7   
@alicebe8750
@alicebe8750 7 месяцев назад
Merci pour la traduction soignée. J'ai apprécié cette vidéo. Émile Bruneau avait un charisme, c'est clair. Son travail et celui de ses coéquipiers devraient apparaître dans nos institutions d'enseignement et ce dès le plus jeune âge, pour arrêter ces automatismes sociaux qui provoquent les escalades de violence dans les groupes de toutes sortes.
@MW-sw7so
@MW-sw7so 2 года назад
Getting rid of bias is not a good thing. We need bias. We need TO NOT like certain things. We need TO like certain things. Theres nothing wrong with it, leave it alone.
@timeless_heritage
@timeless_heritage 2 года назад
@arrsea right? 😂
@timeless_heritage
@timeless_heritage 2 года назад
Any examples of what you believe we like and don't like that shouldn't be changed?
@ChristopherFrawley
@ChristopherFrawley Год назад
Sorry, too general and simplistic. This talk isn't about preferences - what you like and not like. It's about automatic ways of seeing the world. When biases advantage some groups and disadvantage others, promote division, and cause human suffering we have to look at their root causes and work to eliminate them, - period.
@camcam8995
@camcam8995 Год назад
@@ChristopherFrawley good way to put it maybe they didn’t watch the vid and just commented not understanding
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