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Are we using tech as a digital sedative? And if so, what does that do to our ability to touch and feel? Aleks looks at why we turn to tech to render us emotionally numb…

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28 minutes

Last on

Mon 3 Jun 2019 16:30

Karen Douglas

Karen Douglas
is Professor of Social Psychology at The University of Kent. She tells us about her research into Phubbing - Β the habit of snubbing someone in favour of a mobile phone - affects emotional connection and our basic human needs.

Sara Konrath

Sara Konrath
Sara Konrath is an expert on the science of empathy and narcissism. A social psychologist, she directs the Interdisciplinary Program on Empathy and Altruism Research (iPEARlab.org). Konrath’s research examines changes over time in empathy and related personality traits, and health and well-being implications of them. She has recently developed two mobile-phone based programs to help increase empathy in youth.
She tells us how technology can numb emotions, but if designed and used correctly could actually encourage empathy in users.

Ross Muir

Ross Muir
Ross Muir is a Glasgow based artist. His original paintings can be purchased through the in Glasgow. He tells us about why he numbed his emotions with drugs for years, and what happened when he stopped trying to feel nothing.

Katherine O’Brien

Katherine O’Brien
Katherine O’Brien is Associate Director of Communications and Campaigns at The British Pregnancy Advisory Service.
She shares insights from her research into how digital technology and social media is affecting friendship and sexual relationships in teenagers.

Joel Salinas

Joel Salinas
Dr. Joel Salinas has synesthesia, a complex neurologic trait that causes him to constantly perceive each of his senses as a mix with one or more of his other sensesβ€”from hearing colors and tasting sounds to experiencing people as numbers.. He specializes in , with emphasis in neuropsychiatry and cognitive behavioral neurology, and conducts research in to understand the complex neurobiological interplay between social relationships and brain health. He chronicles his experiences as a doctor living with synesthesia in his new book, .
Joel tells us about living with mirror touch, the struggles and benefits of such intense, physical empathy with his patients, and what technology could mean for connecting with people.

Broadcast

  • Mon 3 Jun 2019 16:30

Podcast