Would you consider yourself to be prejudiced against people who are different from you? Most of us would say no. But in the late 1990s, researchers created a test to measure biases that may be hidden from our conscious minds. Millions of people have taken it since, and not everyone likes what they've discovered. This week, we launch a two-part look at implicit bias with psychologist Mahzarin Banaji. We ask how is it that we can hold negative stereotypes — without being aware of them.
Did you hear all the episodes in our Happiness 2.0 series? Be sure to check out our conversation about awe, and how we can cultivate more of it in our lives. And if you like our work, please consider supporting it. Thanks!
Our Noisy Minds
The Fake Bride
Josh Gitelson: My Unsung Hero
One Head, Two Brains
Deb Pierce: My Unsung Hero
Why Conversations Go Wrong
Unsung Hero: A Cold Nevada Night
Humor Us
An Unfinished Lesson
Useful Delusions
Made of Honor
The Story of Your Life
The Story of Stories
Radically Normal
The Snowball Effect
The Match
Creating God
Is It Better to Know?
Love is Blind
How They See Us
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It is Free
My Unsung Hero
A Slight Change of Plans
No Stupid Questions
Code Switch
Freakonomics Radio