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The Human Behavior Podcast

The Human Behavior Podcast

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Do you ever wonder why people act the way that they do? Join human behavior experts Brian Marren and Greg Williams as they discuss all things human behavior related. Their goal is to increase your Advanced Critical Thinking ability through a better understanding of HBPR&A (Human Behavior Pattern Recognition & Analysis.) What is HBPR&A? It's a scientific (and fun) way to understand and articulate human behavior cues so that you can predict likely outcomes and it works regardless of your race, religion, political ideology or culture!

© 2025 The Human Behavior Podcast
Ciencia Ciencias Sociales Filosofía
Episodios
  • Do You REALLY Remember?
    Jun 20 2025

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    What if your memory's "flaws" are actually its most powerful features?

    The startling truth is your memory was never designed to function like a perfect recording—it's a creative, adaptive system built to help you survive and thrive. Those moments when you confidently recall something that never happened exactly as you remember? That's not a glitch—it's your brain doing exactly what it evolved to do.

    In this fascinating exploration, we unpack why your memories slip, warp, and even deliberately deceive you—and why that's incredibly valuable. Using the compelling metaphor of Lego bricks, we reveal how memories are constructed, disassembled, and rebuilt slightly differently each time you recall them. This process isn't random; it's purposeful adaptation that helps you make sense of an otherwise chaotic world.

    We dive into the science behind why we forget (retrieval cues and brain auditing), why memories distort (reconstruction and encoding), and how biases influence what we remember (survival priorities and emotional regulation). From phantom limbs to dream science, we explore cutting-edge research showing how these memory "quirks" actually help us learn faster, avoid danger, and emotionally process difficult experiences.

    Most importantly, we share practical techniques to work with—not against—your brain's natural memory systems. Learn how to use spaced retrieval, emotional tagging, immediate documentation, and structured recall to lock in crucial information when it matters most. Whether you're a student, professional, or simply someone who's ever walked away from an important conversation only to later realize you remembered it all wrong, these insights will transform how you understand and harness your mind's remarkable capabilities.

    Support the show

    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/

    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati

    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/

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    1 h y 2 m
  • What Problem Does This Solve?
    Jun 3 2025

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    We explore why organizations rush toward new tech, convinced that shiny equipment will solve their deepest problems when often the issues are fundamentally about training, judgment, and decision-making.

    • The Boeing 737 MAX case study demonstrates how technological "fixes" without proper training led to catastrophic failures
    • Most resource decisions are reactive, not strategic, with organizations buying gear instead of investing in people
    • Tools are the default solution because they offer tangible ROI, political safety, and avoid accountability for leadership
    • Technology enhances execution after a decision has been made but doesn't affect whether the decision itself was appropriate
    • Training operates "left of bang" by teaching when to act and how to assess situations, regardless of available tools
    • The critical question: "If you removed all your high-speed gear, would your people still make good decisions?"
    • The real ROI comes from developing good judgment under pressure, not from acquiring more equipment
    • Rather than measuring success by resources spent, focus on measurable outcomes and performance improvements

    Don't forget to check out our Patreon channel for additional content and subscriber-only episodes. If you enjoyed the podcast, please consider leaving us a review and, more importantly, sharing it with a friend. Training changes behavior.


    Support the show

    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/

    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati

    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/

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    1 h y 8 m
  • If It Walks Like A Duck
    May 13 2025

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    Mental errors don't just lead to embarrassing moments—they can be fatal. When your brain categorizes something as familiar and routine, it filters out critical information that could save your life.

    The duck versus platypus problem perfectly captures this dangerous cognitive trap. Both creatures share remarkably similar features—broad bills, webbed feet, semi-aquatic lifestyles—but only one has venomous spurs that could put you in the hospital. When you mistake a platypus for a duck, you've missed the most important detail.

    Through two powerful real-world examples, we unpack how this error pattern repeats in high-stakes environments. A paramedic, responding to what appeared to be a routine medical call, was fatally stabbed by a patient with a violent history he never knew about. Law enforcement officers, celebrating their successful drug bust, failed to properly search a suspect who was carrying a loaded gun all the way into the jail. In both cases, what people thought they were seeing wasn't what was actually there.

    The second analogy we explore—outrunning your headlights—explains why we miss these critical signals. Sometimes we're moving too fast to process what's in front of us. Other times, we've forgotten to turn on our mental headlights altogether. Either way, we're blind to dangers lurking ahead.

    Our brains are wired for this type of error. Each time we successfully navigate a situation, dopamine reinforces the pattern, making us more confident and less careful the next time around. We follow our unconscious roadmap rather than creating our own, questioning, and exploring the territory.

    This episode isn't about blaming victims of these errors—it's about recognizing the universal human tendency to miss critical information when we think we already know what we're dealing with. By slowing down, paying attention to incongruent signals, and getting comfortable with not immediately knowing all the answers, we can create the space needed to see things as they truly are.

    Have you encountered your own duck versus platypus situations? We'd love to hear about times when slowing down and questioning assumptions made all the difference in your life or work.

    Support the show

    Website: https://thehumanbehaviorpodcast.buzzsprout.com/share

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheHumanBehaviorPodcast

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehumanbehaviorpodcast/

    Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArcadiaCognerati

    More about Greg and Brian: https://arcadiacognerati.com/arcadia-cognerati-leadership-team/

    Más Menos
    57 m
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