Dissociative identity disorder – which many people recognize by its former name, multiple personality disorder – is one of Hollywood’s favorite psychology-related topics, with a decades-long history of movie and TV portrayals, most recently in this spring’s “Moon Knight.” But in real life, DID does not look like it does on the screen. Bethany Brand, PhD, of Towson University, discusses why it is more subtle than TV and movie portrayals would lead viewers to believe, what is happening in the brains of patients who experience it and what treatments are available.
How to cope with political stress this election season, with Brett Q. Ford, PhD, and Kevin Smith, PhD
How Sesame Street teaches kids about emotional well-being, with Rosemarie Truglio, PhD
What déjà vu can teach us about memory, with Chris Moulin, PhD
The psychology of sports fans, with Daniel Wann, PhD
You can learn new things at any age, with Rachel Wu, PhD
Understanding the mind of a serial killer, with Louis Schlesinger, PhD
Coping with family estrangement, with Lucy Blake, PhD
How to help kids navigate friendship, with Eileen Kennedy-Moore, PhD
Bridging the generation gap at work, with Megan Gerhardt, PhD
Expressive writing can help your mental health, with James Pennebaker, PhD
How music, memory and emotion are connected, with Elizabeth Margulis, PhD
What’s going on inside your cat’s head? With Kristyn Vitale, PhD
Designing cities to improve mental health, with Jenny Roe, PhD
Love and algorithms: The future of dating apps, with Liesel Sharabi, PhD
How video games can help kids learn and grow, with Susan Rivers, PhD
How to use AI ethically, with Nathanael Fast, PhD
How to learn from regret, with Robert Leahy, PhD
How to fail successfully, with Amy Edmondson, PhD, and Samuel West, PhD
Why diversity matters, with Robert Sellers, PhD
The benefits of being bilingual, with Viorica Marian, PhD
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
Short Wave
Unexplainable
Stuff To Blow Your Mind
پادکست آذرخش مکری - azarakhsh mokri