Episodios

  • 36 | What makes us engage with content?
    Oct 15 2025

    Why do we engage with information online?

    Hannah Metzler joins the podcast to talk about the role of emotions and personal identity when investigating the spread of misinformation. We chat about a lot of the myths surrounding misinformation, the circumstances that make certain misinformation appealing to people, and why engaging with negative content is so much more tempting than positive content.

    Guest: Hannah Metzler

    Monkey Dance Podcast Website

    Más Menos
    1 h y 26 m
  • 35 | Why do some conflicts become violent?
    Oct 2 2025

    Why do some resistance groups resort to armed struggle? And when do those groups decide it's time to put down arms?

    Barbora Valik joins to talk about the factors that can lead to the violent mobilization of resistance movements, particularly as a strategy to call attention to their cause, and what needs to change for the violence to end.

    We speak specifically about self-determination movements of indigenous peoples in Mexico, Colombia, and Chile. We chat about how states have many means of suppressing dissent, how they often avoid negotiating with groups they systematically marginalize, and why this can lead to groups struggling to seek leverage by any means necessary, ultimately turning to violence as a tool to gain concessions.

    We also discuss why self-determination struggles need to ensure they control their own narrative, and why keeping the groups demands at the forefront of that narrative seems to be a successful strategy.

    Guest: Barbora Valik

    You can also watch the episode on youtube

    Notes from Barbora:

    • Socialization = the process through which a movement positions itself within a community of other movements with the goal of emulating, learning, and normatively legitimising certain strategies.
    • Group leverage = the capacity of the movement to influence and exert pressure on state actors, deriving from demographic characteristics, broad alliances, organisational capacity, and inclusion.
    • Regime type = the nature of the political regime, capturing whether the context within which the movement operates is democratic, authoritarian, or democratising.

    For a graph of Barbora's model, visit The Monkey Dance Website

    Más Menos
    1 h y 40 m
  • A2 | What does it mean to have power?
    Sep 3 2025

    Inequality seems to be a fundamental aspect of the society we've created. Is an unequal power dynamic endemic to any interaction between a set of individuals?

    In this episode from 2 years ago, Guilherme and I talk about how to define the concept of power, the function of unequal power dynamics, and how it manages to generate stable systems that perpetuate inequities that last for generations.

    On a small break from the podcast and have been thinking a bit more about power again, particularly in epistemic contexts, so thought it would be a good time to repost this. Planning to have new episodes out again starting in October.

    Full show notes at:

    https://www.monkeydancepod.com/episodes/episode-2

    Más Menos
    1 h y 35 m
  • 34 | How do infants process information?
    Jul 23 2025

    How do infants treat information they come across?

    I sit down with Velisar Manea to chat about how the infant mind develops, the types of biases evolution might have built in, and how they manage to be so adaptive.

    We also chat a good bit of theory, particularly about whether we need to attribute mental states to others or whether statistical prediction is enough. We chat about the evolutionary usefulness of biological constraints, the caloric demands of cognition versus the energy demands of AI, and whether something like an LLM can ever actually reach cognition or just mimic it.

    Really excited to bring you this chat, but again still having some microphone issues. Still some trial an error!

    Más Menos
    1 h y 30 m
  • 33 | Early childhood memories and visual cognition
    Jun 26 2025

    Nicolas Goupil joins me to chat about his work spanning everything from forming early childhood memories, to visual cognition, to hierarchies in groups. It's a fun, wide ranging conversation and we cover a good bit of ground, from developmental cognitive neuroscience to social cognition.

    In Copenhagen for a few months, so the next several episode will be on the road. Sorry if the audio quality is not as good as usual!

    Más Menos
    1 h y 23 m
  • 32 | When curiosity is limited by our biases
    Jun 11 2025

    How do our biases interfere with our willingness to learn?

    Pelin Kasar and Juliette Vazard both return to the podcast for a chat at the intersection of beliefs, biases, and curiosity.

    We talk about curiosity -- how to define it, its emotional role, and its relationship with learning -- and about biases -- what a bias is, its implications in society, and its relationship to curiosity.

    The conversation covers a lot of ground as we work through definitions and reach mutual understandings of each of the terms,

    Guest: Pelin Kasar

    Guest: Juliette Vazard

    To hear more from Pelin check out Episode 6 and Episode 28

    To hear more from Juliette check out Episode 20 and Episode 24

    Más Menos
    1 h y 41 m
  • 31 | Who has the rights to resources?
    May 28 2025

    Resource management is a difficult problem. Deciding who gets access to certain resources, and how much of it they have access to, can often be existential struggle. This is complicated with issues of historical access of particular groups, over exploited ecosystems nearing collapse, and geopolitical shifts that lead to changes in demand.

    We sit down with Arev Papazian to chat about the difficulties of delegation and determining permissions. We cover some of the ground regarding the challenges of maintaining a healthy ecosystem, one that includes humans, when there are so many stakeholders involved (not all of them altruistic).

    Guest: Arev Papazian

    Más Menos
    1 h y 40 m
  • 30 | How do we decide who learn from?
    May 14 2025

    What makes someone a good source to learn from?

    Melissa Koenig explains how we learn from others: from the strategies we use to the biases we lean on when making epistemic decisions. We chat about the emergence of racial and gender biases and how we often seek information from sources that we identify with, covering the dynamics of of social identities and justice. And we end with chatting about the role of science in society and the importance of not separating work and activism.

    Melissa Koenig is a professor at the Institute of Child Development https://icd.umn.edu/melissa-koenig

    This is the first time trying out recording on the road, sorry for the clumsiness of the audio and video but learned a few good things for next time!

    Más Menos
    1 h y 27 m