People Who Read People: A Behavior and Psychology Podcast
A podcast by Zachary Elwood
170 Episodes
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Is liberal bias impeding U.S. depolarization and conflict resolution efforts?, with Guy Burgess
Published: 11/20/2022 -
The art of recruiting, with Blake Mobley
Published: 11/18/2022 -
Dealing with anxiety and mental health issues as a college student
Published: 11/10/2022 -
Understanding madness, with Richard Bentall
Published: 11/4/2022 -
Reading tells in football, with Larry Hart
Published: 10/29/2022 -
The challenges and rewards of studying nonverbal behavior, with Alan Crawley
Published: 10/15/2022 -
How do we react when our sense of meaning is threatened?, with Steven Heine
Published: 10/10/2022 -
Is the entire world becoming more polarized?, with Andrew O'Donohue
Published: 10/1/2022 -
Are eye movement patterns linked to personality traits?, with Sabrina Hoppe
Published: 9/21/2022 -
Is body language actually useful for detecting lies?, with Tim Levine
Published: 8/30/2022 -
Reading "drug-seeking" behaviors, with Dr. Casey Grover
Published: 8/17/2022 -
Predicting psychosis and schizophrenia using language patterns, with Neguine Rezaii
Published: 8/9/2022 -
Reading and predicting jury behavior, with Christina Marinakis (reshare from 2018)
Published: 7/21/2022 -
How to spot fake online reviews, with Olu Popoola (reshare from 2019)
Published: 7/6/2022 -
The psychological factors of polarized groups, with Matthew Hornsey
Published: 6/11/2022 -
Analyzing written and verbal statements for hidden meaning, with Mark McClish (reshare from 2018)
Published: 5/22/2022 -
Behavioral indicators of good and bad relationships, with Brandi Fink
Published: 5/8/2022 -
Psychological effects of social media content moderation policies, with Bill Ottman
Published: 5/1/2022 -
Are a majority of Americans actually racist?, with Leonie Huddy
Published: 4/19/2022 -
Cryptocurrency, problem gambling, and addiction, with Paul Delfabbro
Published: 4/10/2022
This is a podcast about deciphering human behavior and understanding why people do the things they do. I, Zach Elwood, talk with people from a wide range of fields about how they make sense of human behavior and psychology. I've talked to jury consultants, interrogation professionals, behavior researchers, sports analysts, professional poker players, to name a few. There are more than 135 episodes, many of them quite good (although some say I'm biased). To learn more, go to PeopleWhoReadPeople.com.