
Talk Psych to Me
Let's get psychology out of the lab and into the streets. Join hosts Tania Luna (psychology researcher) and Brian Luna (total layperson) as they turn fascinating research into practical tips for getting better at being human.
Talk Psych to Me
Discussing Disgust: Onions, poop, and Hitler's sweater
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Scarlet Moon Things
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Season 1
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Episode 18
Mucus. Puss. Maggots. Feces. Eating bats. Eating cows. Racism. In this episode, we discuss the benefits and dangers of disgust and tackle some tough questions like: Is anything objectively disgusting? Why are some people more easily disgusted than others? And... what's that smell?
Discuss disgust with us!
Instagram: @talkpsychtomepodcast
Email: tp2mpodcast@gmail.com
Further Reading:
- "Disgust" by Rozin, Haidt, & McCauley (2008)
- "The Moral Affiliations of Disgust: A Functional MRI Study" by Moll, et. al (2005)
- "The emotional dog and its rational tail" by Haidt (2001)
- "In bad taste: evidence for the oral origins of moral disgust" by Chapman et. al. (2009)
- "The makings of the magical mind: The nature of function of sympathetic magic" by Nemeroff & Rozin (2000)
- "The Child's Conception of Food" by Rozin et. al (1986)
- "Sex Differences in Disgust: Why Are Women More Easily Disgusted Than Men?" by Al-Shawaf, Lewis, & Buss (2017)
- "Feelings of Disgust and Disgust-Induced Avoidance Weaken following Induced Sexual Arousal in Women" by Borg and de Jong (2012)
- The Disgust Scale by Haidt, McCauley, & Rozin (last updated in 2012)
- "Disgust as Embodied Moral Judgment" by Schnall et. al (2008)
- "Is that disgust I see? Political ideology and based visual attention" by
Oosterhoff & Ford (2018)- A more recent study that challenges the finding that conservatives are more easily disgusted than liberals: "Is Disgust a 'Conservative' Emotion?" by Elad-Strenger, Proch, & Kessler (2019)
Produced by Scarlet Moon Things
Music by Barrie Gledden, Kes Loy, and Richard Kimmings