David Berreby

61 posts · 48,358 views

David Berreby is the author of "Us and Them: The Science of Identity." He has written about human behavior and other science topics for The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Slate, Smithsonian, The New Republic, Nature, Discover, Vogue and many other publications. He has been a Visiting Scholar at the University of Paris, a Science Writing Fellow at the Marine Biological Laboratory, a resident at Yaddo, and in 2006 was awarded the Erving Goffman Award for Outstanding Scholarship for the first edition of "Us and Them." David can be found on Twitter at @davidberreby and reached by email at david [at] davidberreby [dot] com.

Mind Matters
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  • May 18, 2012
  • 04:54 PM
  • 322 views

Study: Want to Look Aggressive? Wear Black

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Psychology is rich in findings that emerge from complex statistics done on the behavior of college students behaving for money or course credit. It's fair to wonder, then, how well those findings relate to the real world: Maybe a result is peculiar to undergrads, or maybe it's a subtle effect that ...Read More
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  • March 8, 2012
  • 05:12 PM
  • 363 views

Gender Differences in Science and Math Abilities? Not In This Matrilineal Society

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Happy International Day of You, women of the world. Unfortunately it remains internationally respectable to argue that science has shown that men are inherently better at math and scientific pursuits than you are. This belief is based on the gender difference in scores on standardized tests ...Read More
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Hoffman, M., Gneezy, U., & List, J. (2011) Nurture affects gender differences in spatial abilities. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108(36), 14786-14788. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1015182108  

  • January 12, 2012
  • 05:39 PM
  • 270 views

Study: If You Like a Food's Politics, You'll Find It More Nutritious

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Anything "organic" or "low-fat" must be good for you, right? Ask people how fattening those organic chocolate-covered peanuts are, and they'll guess a lower number than they did for the non-organic version. They'll also eat more than they would have otherwise. The same goes for "low-fat" products ...Read More
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Schuldt, J., Muller, D., & Schwarz, N. (2012) The "Fair Trade" Effect: Health Halos From Social Ethics Claims. Social Psychological and Personality Science. DOI: 10.1177/1948550611431643  

  • December 31, 2011
  • 03:43 PM
  • 295 views

Study: True Memories Can Form As Early as 2 Years Old

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Ah, New Year's Eve: It feels so important to find something significant, meaningful, memorable to do. And then two weeks later you can't recall what it was, because it was so much like all the others.  If this year brought something really unique and striking (a sky-parade of 12 dancing pink ...Read More
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  • May 13, 2011
  • 09:25 AM
  • 571 views

Why Creativity Can Be A Problem for Leaders

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Newt Gingrich, the thinking man's Glenn Beck, is said to be a viable Presidential candidate because he has fresh, creative ideas. Even if you accept that notion at face value, you have to wonder how much of an advantage it will be. As this study (pdf) suggests, people tend to see creativity and ...Read More
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  • March 29, 2011
  • 08:01 AM
  • 988 views

When Reason Falters, It's Age-Morphing Apps and Virtual Reality to the Rescue

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


The other day I asked for examples of practical post-rationality—changes in law or policy that happened because institutions have stopped assuming that people behave rationally. A number of people wrote in about instances of what Jon Elster calls "precommitment" or "self-binding": Giving up some ...Read More
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  • March 27, 2011
  • 11:07 AM
  • 1,005 views

Proof That People Are Prejudiced Against Breast-Feeding Women? Not So Fast

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


This study just out in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin claims to have found a general societal prejudice against women who breast-feed. Reports about the work concurred. But I think it works better as an example of what's wrong with our conceptions of prejudice. It's also good fodder for ...Read More
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  • March 17, 2011
  • 12:00 PM
  • 743 views

Who's More Likely to Be Right: A Century of Economics Or A Billion Years of Evolution?

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Advocates of nuclear power have been busy this week, casting choices about reactors as a battle of head versus heart: Emotionally, we're scared and impressed by the ongoing nuclear crisis in Japan, they say, but the rational choice for the future is to keep licensing those reactors.
As I mentioned ...Read More
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  • March 14, 2011
  • 01:05 PM
  • 1,296 views

Is an Atlantic Tsunami Possible?

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


A lot of people know that New York City sits on fault lines (and that the Indian Point Nuclear Power plant is above the intersection of two active seismic zones), all of which makes it entirely possible that the city could suffer a catastrophic earthquake. But I thought at least I and my fellow ...Read More
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  • March 12, 2011
  • 10:19 AM
  • 1,114 views

The Longer You Live, the Worse You Drive

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Research on life extension is all about aging and death within a human body. Perhaps it should expand to encompass the effects of being run over by a car: According to this study, elderly drivers are half as likely to notice hazards and pedestrians as are younger drivers. So if we ever attain a ...Read More
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  • February 15, 2011
  • 09:23 AM
  • 1,127 views

Why You Can't Cure a Plague of Olbermanns With An Infusion of O'Reillys

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Do left-leaning social sciences need an influx of conservatives to open their collective minds? So argues Jon Haidt, but I wonder. As I read this study in this month's Journal of Risk Research, adding another ideology to social psychology would more likely lead to a lot of pointless yelling and a ...Read More
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Kahan, D., Jenkins-Smith, H., & Braman, D. (2011) Cultural cognition of scientific consensus. Journal of Risk Research, 14(2), 147-174. DOI: 10.1080/13669877.2010.511246  

  • February 9, 2011
  • 02:58 PM
  • 873 views

Is Social Science Flying Around in Circles, Using Only Its Left Wing?

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


What's the matter with social psychology? Everybody in social science (including social psychology itself) has a diagnosis, because everybody thinks something is amiss ("it's a terrible field," an anthropologist once told me). As John Tierney reported on Monday, Jonathan Haidt of the University of ...Read More
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  • February 6, 2011
  • 01:35 PM
  • 738 views

Study: When Your Super Bowl Team Goes Down, Your Death Risk Goes Up

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


The link between Super Bowls and heart failure is usually written in guacamole and beer. But we are a social species, whose feelings about group identity have a direct impact on health, via the brain-body connection. Hence this study in this month's Clinical Cardiology, which says death rates in ...Read More
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  • January 27, 2011
  • 08:03 AM
  • 684 views

Study: A Complete Stranger Understands You About as Well as Your Spouse Does

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


If you say "it's snowing hard out there," are you annoyed if no one gets up to shovel the walkway? Vexed, are you, by your intimates' inability to see what you meant? Do you think a long love's result should be near-wordless mind-reading? If so, here is some advice derived from the current issue of ...Read More
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Savitsky, K., Keysar, B., Epley, N., Carter, T., & Swanson, A. (2011) The closeness-communication bias: Increased egocentrism among friends versus strangers. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 47(1), 269-273. DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2010.09.005  

  • January 26, 2011
  • 02:18 PM
  • 711 views

What the Tiger Mother Left Out

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


A cognitive scientist friend of mine made a good point the other day about Amy Chua's assertion that "nothing is fun until you're good at it." It is, he said (and I should have seen right away) not true. Lots of things are fun before you're good at them. Potching around with a guitar or a tennis ...Read More
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  • January 20, 2011
  • 07:06 PM
  • 804 views

Study: Your Genes Help Pick Your Friends

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


How much of you resides between your ears? And how much of what you call "me" is made outside your body, in your relationships with others? Biologists have largely confined themselves to aspects of the mind that can be measured in a single human body (galvanic skin response, activity in the amygdala ...Read More
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Fowler, J., Settle, J., & Christakis, N. (2011) Correlated genotypes in friendship networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1011687108  

  • January 11, 2011
  • 02:50 PM
  • 853 views

Chinese Mothers, American Anxieties and the Nature of Parenting

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


Over the weekend I read Amy Chua's paean to "Chinese parents" in The Wall Street Journal with morbid fascination. What felt morbid was Chua's "Mommie Dearest" anecdote about battling with her 7-year-old because the little girl couldn't master a difficult piano piece (which involved threatening to ...Read More
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QUINN, N. (2003) Cultural Selves. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1001(1), 145-176. DOI: 10.1196/annals.1279.010  

  • January 4, 2011
  • 11:09 PM
  • 976 views

Study: To Improve Your Score, Try a Little Pre-Test Ancestor Worship

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


I admit I was creeped out by this new paper, from the European Journal of Social Psychology, which reports that people primed to think about their ancestors performed better on intelligence tests than did people who didn't. I'm just a little squicked that a study performed in Austria commends pride ...Read More
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  • January 1, 2011
  • 08:35 PM
  • 853 views

Study: Sugar Pills Heal People Who Believe They Will Work

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


In a technology-based culture, you learn from infancy that truth is what can be counted and measured. That makes it easy to divide any conversation into what you learned (important!) and how you learned it (immaterial). What your medical tests reveal is vital; how your doctor tells you, her "bedside ...Read More
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Kaptchuk, T., Friedlander, E., Kelley, J., Sanchez, M., Kokkotou, E., Singer, J., Kowalczykowski, M., Miller, F., Kirsch, I., & Lembo, A. (2010) Placebos without Deception: A Randomized Controlled Trial in Irritable Bowel Syndrome. PLoS ONE, 5(12). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015591  

  • December 30, 2010
  • 09:25 AM
  • 843 views

How Much Pain is Our Kid Feeling? Well, How Much Can We Afford?

by David Berreby in Mind Matters


When a sick kid is too young to speak, doctors naturally ask a parent or other caretaker how much it hurts. Only half of the answer, according to this study in this month's Journal of Pain, is based on symptoms. The rest arises from the adult's own life experience, including social class: Given a ...Read More
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