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Something You Should Know

The Fascinating Ways Things Spread & How Technology Controls You – If You Let It

Something You Should Know

Mike Carruthers | OmniCastMedia

Science, Self-improvement, Social Sciences, Health & Fitness, Education

4.54.3K Ratings

🗓️ 9 July 2020

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Have you ever wanted to get someone to disclose more about themselves? This episode begins with a very simple strategy that will loosen someone up and get them to tell you a lot more about the details of their life. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs12110-015-9225-8#page-1 How do things spread? By that I mean not just viruses like the flu or corona virus but also rumors and viral videos or fake news stories – why do some of these things gather steam and spread like wildfire? And then, why do they stop? Every year people catch the flu and then in the summer, it just stops. What stops it? Listen to my guest Adam Kucharski, he is an epidemiologist and author of the book The Rules of Contagion: Why Things Spread and Why They Stop (https://amzn.to/3f7oJh5).  What’s the connection between arguments and hunger? Well if you want to get along better with the people or person you live with – you need to hear me explain this interesting science. http://www.independent.ie/style/sex-relationships/are-you-rowing-with-your-partner-you-might-just-behangry-30191887.html You know that feeling of being a slave to your phone or to email? That feeling of always being available is taking a toll on you whether you know it or not. Journalist Ian Douglas has studied this extensively and has written a book called Is Technology Making Us Sick? (https://amzn.to/3f65wfX)  Ian joins me to explain how you are being manipulated into always staying available and what it is doing to your health. He also has some excellent strategies to deal with the problem without having to turn all your electronics off.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:26.6

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0:31.0

Today on something you should know,

0:34.0

we start with a simple way to get people to open up and reveal details about themselves.

0:39.6

Then an explanation of why things spread.

0:42.8

Not just things like viruses, but also videos, rumors, and fake news.

0:47.6

People have a tendency to value novel information,

0:50.0

which completely makes sense, just that new information is often something that's valuable to us.

0:54.6

By definition, if something is false, it's more likely to be new to us.

0:58.6

So actually there are these inherent characteristics of misinformation,

1:01.6

which might be helping them spread more than other sources.

1:05.2

Also, the fascinating connection between the arguments couples have and how hungry they are.

1:11.2

And a lot of us are addicted to our phones and technology.

1:15.2

And in fact, the thing that you need to know is that this is something the technology is designed to do.

1:21.0

It's not simply neutral delivery of messages, it's trying to form a habit.

...

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