Why am I talking about being WEIRD? Because people in Western, individualistic cultures tend to choose more of these abstract pairings. @joehenrich.bsky.social @stevenheine.bsky.social www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Why am I talking about being WEIRD? Because people in Western, individualistic cultures tend to choose more of these abstract pairings. @joehenrich.bsky.social @stevenheine.bsky.social www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
"basic cognitive processes underlying explanatory reasoning give rise to a systematic inherence bias among practicing scientistsβa tendency to explain phenomena in terms of their inherent properties rather than external factors"
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
I reply here to Mickey Inzlichtβs critique of our assessment of the TMT literature -led by former grad students, Lihan Chen and Rachele Benjamin. We consider the question of how can we best evaluate a literature and, judging from his critique, reach a controversial conclusion.
An ad for genetic customisation of human embryos
To be very clear, these kinds of polygenic scores are incredibly shit predictors of individual traits... HT @anjiolina.bsky.social #GATTACA
Short piece in The Conversation about our recent PNAS paper on (even atheists') intuitive preferences for religion!
Enjoy & spread as you see fit!
theconversation.com/did-humans-e...
Very nice in @pnas.org - people who slept closer to their own culture's norms for sleep duration had better overall health. Sleep duration is more complex than often considered in a strict neuroscientific or biomedical sense. @ChristineOuBC @stevenheine.bsky.social www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Think 8 hours of sleep is the magic number? Research from Dr. @stevenheine.bsky.social included the analysis of over 5,000 people in 20 countries, revealing that the hours of sleep required for good health varies significantly across different cultures. psych.ubc.ca/news/sleep-c...
Whatβs a healthy amount of sleep? π΄
A new UBC study analyzed sleep data and health outcomes for nearly 5,000 people in 20 countries, which revealed that the hours of sleep required for good health varies significantly across different cultures.
Read more: bit.ly/4jEq3JG
"most [psychologists] thought βHomo economicusβ (self-interested rationality) poor model human behaviour...split on whether personality largely stable...researchers in evolution/comparative thought theories should focus more on evolution of mental faculties [evo psy]" www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Excellent critique of childhood development interventions: "The privileged of Global North & South can find solace in the idea they have little responsibility for inequality. If bad childcare & poor brain development are major contributing factors to poverty, then it's parentsβ job to overcome it"
I had a great discussion with Kurt and Tim at Behavioral Grooves. The Existential Playbook: How to Make Sense of Your Life behavioralgrooves.com/episode/the-...
New episode (1072), with Dr. Steven Heine (@stevenheine.bsky.social). We talk about his new book, Start Making Sense: How Existential Psychology Can Help Us Build Meaningful Lives in Absurd Times. #psychology #Science
YouTube: youtu.be/oQj1VpqU1kQ
Podcast: bit.ly/4iWQfOS
I had a great discussion with Ricardo about how people maintain meaningful lives.
Ou, C., Lou, N. M., Maheshka, C., Shi, M., Takemura, K., Cheung B., & Heine, S. J. (in press). Healthy sleep durations appear to vary across cultures. PNAS. osf.io/preprints/ps...
e) Individuals whose sleep duration was closer to their countryβs norms reported better health. These findings suggest that the amount of sleep associated with optimal health varies across countries. There isnβt a global standard for healthy sleep durations.
c) A quadratic relation emerged between sleep duration and health in all countries such that both too much sleep and too little sleep was associated with worse health; d) The turning points of these quadratic curves varied significantly between countries.
b) People from countries with longer sleep durations were not healthier than from countries with shorter durations. We replicated this by analyzing national sleep durations from 14 past studies which also revealed no associations with national health.
In a new paper in press at PNAS, we collected data on sleep duration and health from 5000 participants in 20 countries. There were several notable findings: a) First, average sleep durations varied substantially between countries (range = 1.57 hours).
Two common findings from sleep research are that 1) short sleep durations predict worse health outcomes, and 2) people from some cultures sleep much less than those from others. Do people from cultures with short sleep durations have worse health outcomes? π§΅
Today "Start Making Sense" was named Book of the Day by the Next Big Idea Club. bookoftheday.nextbigideaclub.com/p/the-world-...
Here's a blogpost I wrote on the ironic challenges that we face from having too many choices in our lives. People tend not to appreciate how much anxiety comes with the responsibility of blazing your own trail.
www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/ma...
Thanks Beth for your thoughtful review!
I wrote a piece for Aeon's Psyche Guides on how to find meaning in your life as a buffer against anxiety β psyche.co/guides/how-t... via @aeon.co
Here's a review of Start Making Sense by the Greater Good.
Seven Ways to Bring More Meaning to Your Life greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item...
I had a really fun discussion of my book, Start Making Sense, with Kelly Leonard at Second City. www.secondcity.com/network/cate...
I'm thrilled that the
@nextbigidea.bsky.social
has selected my new book, Start Making Sense, as a monthly must-read! nextbigideaclub.com/magazine/cul...
Nietzsche proclaimed βThat which does not kill me makes me stronger.β I write here about how existential psychology has revealed much evidence in support of this.
The Curious Relations Between Suffering and Meaning | Psychology Today www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/ma...
Here's a tribute that I wrote for David Lynch. We used his films in our research to reveal how people strive to find meaning in what can seem meaningless. I discuss some of this work in my new book: hachettebookgroup.com/titles/steve...
You can take the DeepSeek out of China but you canβt take the China out of DeepSeek
With this book youβll learn more about the original existentialists, how we evolved to live in an ecology of meaning, and the various psychological strategies that we rely on to make our lives meaningful. It should help you chart your way to a more engaged and purposeful life.