These days we see a lot of negative stories related to screen time – how we’re addicted to our phones and social media is damaging our mental health. But is our panic about screens justified? Pete Etchells, professor of psychology and science communication at Bath Spa University, talks Claudia Hammond through the latest evidence in this field – and it turns out it’s all a lot more complicated than we think.
Many of us will often get catchy tunes stuck in our head, or have an inner monologue narrating our experiences. But this isn’t the case for everyone – some people have what they describe as a silent inner world. This inability to hear sounds in your head has been named anauralia, which PhD student Sang Hyun Kim experiences, and he describes his inner life to Claudia. We also hear from Professor of Psychology Tony Lambert, who has been running studies into anauralia at the University of Auckland.
And Claudia is joined in the studio by Catherine Loveday, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Westminster, who has also recently published a study on anauralia – and puts Claudia’s auditory imagery skills to the test. And Catherine also talks us through a new study on how live music can amplify emotional responses in the brain.
Presenter: Claudia Hammond Producer: Sophie Ormiston Studio Manager: Tim Heffer Production Coordinator: Siobhan Maguire Editor: Holly Squire
Café Conversations, The light triad, Conveying anxiety through cartoon pigeons, Listener feedback
Our visual experience: perception of colour and eye contact
Spatial navigation, aphantasia and depression musical
A tale of recovery from Clarke Carlisle and his wife
Neuromyths
Citizens UK and Mental Health, Robin Ince, Film Cuts and Attention
Self-care, Schadenfreude, How maths ability might relate to ball-catching skills
Antidepressant withdrawal, Mates in Mind, Eyes that betray personality
MDMA for alcohol dependence, Music and sleep, Interoceptive skills, Parasites and entrepreneurship
Emotionally unstable personality disorder, Agreeableness and money, Emodiversity
30th anniversary, Incivility of politicians, Arctic scientists' mental health
Loneliness Results
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
How You Can Feel Less Lonely
All in the Mind Awards ceremony from the Wellcome Collection in London
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