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The top 10 myths of psychology | Ben Ambridge | TEDxYouth@Manchester

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    So you've heard of your IQ,
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    your general intelligence,
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    but what's your Psy-Q?
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    How much do you know
    about what makes you tick,
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    and how good are you
    at predicting other peoples' behavior
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    or even your own?
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    And how much about what you think
    you know about psychology is wrong?
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    So let's find out by counting down
    the top 10 myths of psychology.
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    So you've probably heard it said
    that when it comes to their psychology,
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    it's almost as if men are from Mars
    and women are from Venus.
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    But how different
    are men and women really?
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    So to find out, let's start by looking
    at something on which men and women
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    really do differ
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    and plotting some psychological
    gender differences on the same scale.
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    So one thing that men and women
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    do really differ on is how far
    they can throw a ball.
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    So if we look at the data for men here,
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    we see what is called
    a normal distribution curve.
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    A few men can throw a ball really far,
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    and a few men not far at all,
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    but most a kind of average distance.
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    And women share
    the same distribution as well,
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    but actually there's
    quite a big difference.
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    In fact, the average man
    can throw a ball further
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    than about 98 percent of all women.
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    So now let's look at what
    some psychological gender differences
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    look like on the same standardized scale.
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    So any psychologist will tell you
    that men are better
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    at spacial awareness than women,
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    so things like map-reading, for example,
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    and it's true,
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    but let's have a look
    at the size of this difference.
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    It's tiny: the lines are so close together
    that they almost overlap.
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    In fact, the average woman is better
    than 33 percent of all men,
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    and of course, if that was 50 percent,
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    then the two genders
    would be exactly equal.
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    And it's worth bearing in mind
    that this difference
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    and the next one I'm going to show you
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    are pretty much the biggest
    psychological gender differences
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    ever discovered in psychology.
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    So here's the next one.
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    Any psychologist will tell you
    that women are better
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    with language and grammar than men.
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    So here's performance
    on the standardized grammar test.
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    There go the women. There go to the men.
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    Again, yes, women are better on average,
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    but the lines are so close
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    that 33 percent of men
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    are better than the average woman,
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    and again, if it was 50 percent,
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    that would represent
    complete gender equality.
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    So it's not really
    a case of Mars and Venus.
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    It's more a case of, if anything,
    Mars and Snickers:
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    basically the same, but, you know,
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    one's maybe slightly
    nuttier than the other.
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    I won't say which.
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    Right. Now we've got you warmed up.
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    Let's psychoanalyze you using
    the famous Rorschach inkblot test.
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    So you can probably see two, I dunno,
    two bears or two people or something.
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    But what do you think they're doing?
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    Put your hand up if you think
    they're saying hello.
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    Not many people. Okay.
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    Put your hands up if you think
    they are high-fiving.
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    Okay. What if you think they're fighting?
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    Only a few people there.
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    Okay, so if you think they're
    saying hello or high-fiving,
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    then that means you're a friendly person.
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    If you think they're fighting,
    that means you're a bit more
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    of a nasty, aggressive person.
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    Are you a lover or a fighter, basically.
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    What about this one?
    This isn't really a voting one,
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    so on three, everyone
    shout out what you see.
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    One, two, three.
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    I heard hamster. Who said hamster?
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    That was very worrying.
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    A guy there said hamster.
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    Well, you should see
    some kind of two-legged animal here,
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    and then the mirror image of them there.
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    If you didn't, then this means
    that you have difficulty
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    processing complex situations
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    where there's a lot going on.
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    Except, of course,
    it doesn't mean that at all.
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    Rorschach inkblot tests
    have basically no validity
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    when it comes to diagnosing
    people's personality
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    and are not used
    by modern-day psychologists.
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    In fact, one recent study found
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    that when you do try
    to diagnose people's personality
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    using Rorschach inkblot tests,
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    schizophrenia was diagnosed
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    in about one sixth of apparently
    perfectly normal participants.
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    So if you didn't do that well on this,
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    maybe you are not
    a very visual type of person.
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    So let's do another
    quick quiz to find out.
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    When making a cake, do you prefer to
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    -- so hands up for each one again --
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    do you prefer to use
    a recipe book with pictures?
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    Yeah, a few people.
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    Have a friend talk you through?
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    Or have a go, making it up
    as you go along?
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    Quite a few people there.
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    Okay, so if you said a,
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    then this means that you
    are a visual learner
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    and you learn best when information
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    is presented in a visual style.
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    If you said b, it means
    you're an auditory learner,
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    that you learn best when information
    is presented to you in an auditory format,
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    and if you said c,
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    it means that you're
    a kinesthetic learner,
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    that you learn best when you get stuck in
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    and do things with your hands.
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    Except, of course,
    as you've probably guessed,
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    that it doesn't, because
    the whole thing is a complete myth.
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    Learning styles are made up
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    and are not supported
    by scientific evidence.
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    So we know this because in
    tightly controlled experimental studies,
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    when learners are given material to learn
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    either in their preferred style
    or an opposite style,
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    it makes no difference at all
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    to the amount of information
    that they retain.
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    And if you think about it
    for just a second,
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    it's just obvious
    that this has to be true.
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    It's obvious that
    the best presentation format
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    depends not on you,
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    but on what you're trying to learn.
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    Could you learn to drive a car,
    for example,
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    just by listening to someone
    telling you what to do
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    with no kinesthetic experience?
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    Could you solve simultaneous equations
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    by talking them through in your head
    and without writing them down?
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    Could you ?? for your architecture exams
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    using interpretive dance
    if you're a kinesthetic learner?
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    No. What you need to do is match
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    the material to be learned
    to the presentation format,
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    not you.
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    So, I know many of you
    are A-level students
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    that will have recently gotten
    your ???? results.
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    And if you didn't quite get
    what you were hoping for,
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    then you can't really blame
    your learning style,
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    but one thing that you might want
    to think about blaming is your genes.
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    So what this is all about
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    is a recent study
    at University College London
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    found that 58 percent of the variation
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    between different students
    and their ??? results
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    was down to genetic factors.
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    So that sounds a very precise figure,
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    so how can we tell?
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    Well, when we want to unpack
    the relative contributions
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    of genes and the environment,
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    what we can do is do a twin study.
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    So identical twins share
    100 percent of their environment
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    and 100 percent of their genes,
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    whereas non-identical twins
    share 100 percent of their environment,
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    but just like any brother and sister,
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    share only 50 percent of their genes.
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    So by comparing how similar
    ??? results are in identical twins
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    versus non-identical twins,
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    and doing some clever math,
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    we can an idea of how much variation
    and performance is due to the environment
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    and how much is due to genes.
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    And it turns out that it's
    about 58 percent due to genes.
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    So this isn't to undermine the hard work
    that you and your teachers here put in.
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    If you didn't quite get the ??? results
    that you were hoping for,
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    then you can always try blaming
    your parents, or at least their genes.
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    One thing that you shouldn't blame
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    is being a left brained
    or right brained learner,
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    because again, this is a myth.
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    So the myth here is that
    the left brain is logical,
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    it's good with equations like this,
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    and the right brain is more creative,
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    so the right brain is better at music.
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    But again, this is a myth
    because nearly everything that you do
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    involves nearly all parts
    of your brain talking together,
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    even just the most mundane thing
    like having a normal conversation.
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    However, perhaps one reason
    why this myth has survived
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    is that there is
    a slight grain of truth to it.
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    So a related version of the myth
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    is that left-handed people are
    more creative than right-handed people,
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    which kind of makes sense because
    your brain controls the opposite hands,
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    so left-handed people,
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    the right side of the brain
    is slightly more active
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    than the left hand side of the brain,
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    and the idea is the right-hand side
    is more creative.
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    Now, it isn't true per se
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    that left-handed people are more creative
    than right-handed people.
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    What is true that ambidextrous people,
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    or people who use both hands
    for different tasks,
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    are more creative thinkers
    than one-handed people,
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    because being ambidextrous involves
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    having both sides of the brain
    talk to each other a lot,
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    which seems to be involved
    in creating flexible thinking.
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    The myth of the creative left-hander
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    arises from the fact
    that being ambidextrous
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    is more common amongst left-handers
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    than right handers,
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    so a grain of truth in the idea
    of the creative left-hander,
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    but not much.
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    A related myth that you've
    probably heard of
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    is that we only use
    10 percent of our brains.
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    This is, again, a complete myth.
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    Nearly everything that we do,
    even the most mundane thing,
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    uses nearly all of our brains.
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    That said, it is of course true
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    that most of us don't use our brainpower
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    quite as well as we could.
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    So what could we do
    to boost our brain power?
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    Maybe we could listen
    to a nice bit of Mozart.
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    So have you heard of the idea
    of the Mozart effect?
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    So the idea is that listening to Mozart
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    makes you smarter and improves
    your performance on IQ tests.
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    Now again, what's interesting
    about this myth
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    is that although it's basically a myth,
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    there is a grain of truth to it.
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    So the original study found that
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    participants who were played
    Mozart music for a few minutes
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    did better on a subsequent IQ test
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    than participants who simply
    sat in silence.
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    But a follow-up study recruited
    some people who liked Mozart music
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    and then another group of people
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    who were fans of the horror stories
    of Stephen King.
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    And they played the people
    the music or the stories.
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    The people who preferred
    Mozart music to the stories
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    got a bigger IQ boost
    from the Mozart than the stories,
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    but the people who preferred
    the stories to the Mozart music
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    got a bigger IQ boost
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    from listening to the Stephen King stories
    than the Mozart music.
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    So the truth is that listening
    to something that you enjoy
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    perks you up a bit
    and gives you a temporary IQ boost
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    on a narrow range of tasks.
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    There's no suggestion that
    listening to Mozart
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    or indeed Stephen King stories
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    is going to make you any smarter
    in the long run.
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    So another version of the Mozart myth
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    is that listening to Mozart can make you
    not only cleverer but healthier, too.
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    Unfortunately, this doesn't
    seem to be true
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    of someone who listened
    to the music of Mozart almost every day,
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    Mozart himself,
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    who suffered from gonorrhea,
    smallpox, arthritis,
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    and what most people think
    eventually killed him in the end,
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    syphilis.
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    This suggests that Mozart
    should have bit more careful, perhaps,
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    when choosing his sexual partners.
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    But how do we choose a partner?
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    So a myth, but I have to say
    is sometimes spread a bit by sociologists
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    is that our preferences
    in a romantic partner
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    are a product of our culture,
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    that they're very culturally specific,
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    but in fact, the data don't back this up.
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    So a famous study surveyed people from
    32 different cultures across the globe,
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    from Americans to Zulus,
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    on what they look for in a partner.
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    And in every single culture
    across the globe,
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    men placed more value
    on physical attractiveness in a partner
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    than did women,
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    and in every single culture, too,
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    women placed more importance than did men
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    on ambition and high earning power.
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    In every culture, too,
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    men preferred women
    who were younger than themselves,
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    an average of I think it was 2.66 years,
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    and in every culture, too,
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    women preferred men
    who were older than them,
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    so an average of 3.42 years,
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    which is why we've got here
    "Everybody Needs A Sugar Daddy."
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    So moving on from trying
    to score with a partner
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    to trying to score in basketball
    or football or whatever your sport is.
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    So the myth here is that sportsmen
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    go through hot hand streaks,
    Americans call them,
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    or purple patches,
    we sometimes say in England,
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    where they just can't miss,
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    like this guy here.
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    But in fact, what happens is that
    if you analyze the pattern
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    of hits and misses statistically,
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    it turns out that it's
    nearly always at random.
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    Your brain creates patterns
    from the randomness.
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    So if you toss a coin, you know,
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    a streak of heads or tails is going
    to come out somewhere in randomness,
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    and becomes the brain likes
    to see patterns where there are none,
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    we look at these streaks
    and attribute meanings to them
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    and say, "Yeah he's really on form today,"
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    whereas actually you would
    get the same pattern
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    if you were just getting
    hits and misses at random.
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    So an exception to this, however,
    is penalty shootouts.
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    A recent study looking
    at penalty shootouts in football
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    shows that players who represent countries
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    with a very bad record
    in penalty shootouts,
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    like, for example, England,
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    tend to be quicker to take their shots
    than countries with a better record,
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    and presumably as a result,
    they're more likely to miss.
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    Which raises the question
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    of if there's any way that we
    could improve people's performance,
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    and one thing you might think about doing
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    is punishing people for their misses
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    and seeing if that improves things.
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    This idea, the effect that punishment
    can improve performance,
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    is what participants
    thought they were testing
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    in Milgram's famous learning
    and punishment experiment
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    that you've probably heard about
    if you're a psychology student.
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    The story goes that participants
    were prepared to give
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    what they believed to be fatal
    electric shocks to a fellow participant
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    when they got a question wrong,
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    just because someone
    in a white coat told them too.
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    But this story is a myth
    for three reasons.
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    Firstly and most crucially,
    the lab coat wasn't white.
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    It was, in fact, grey.
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    Secondly, the participants
    were told before the study
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    and reminded any time
    they raised a concern,
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    that although the shocks were painful,
    they were not fatal
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    and indeed caused
    no permanent damage whatsoever.
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    And thirdly, participants
    didn't give the shocks
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    just because someone
    in the coat told them to.
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    When they were interviewed
    after the study,
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    all the participants said
    that they firmly believed
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    that the learning and punishment study
    served a worthy scientific purpose
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    which would have
    enduring gains for science
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    as opposed to the momentary
    non-fatal discomfort
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    caused to the participants.
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    Okay, so I've been talking
    for about 12 minutes now,
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    and you've probably been sitting there
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    listening to me, analyzing
    my speech patterns and body language
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    and trying to work out if you should
    take any notice of what I'm saying,
  • 12:58 - 13:01
    whether I'm telling the truth
    or whether I'm lying,
  • 13:01 - 13:03
    but if so you've
    probably completely failed,
  • 13:03 - 13:05
    because although we all think
    we can catch a liar
  • 13:05 - 13:07
    from their body language
    and speech patterns,
  • 13:07 - 13:10
    hundreds of psychological tests
    over the years have shown
  • 13:10 - 13:13
    that all of us, including
    police officers and detectives,
  • 13:13 - 13:16
    are basically at chance when it comes
    to detecting lies from body language
  • 13:16 - 13:18
    and verbal patterns.
  • 13:18 - 13:20
    Interestingly, there is one exception:
  • 13:20 - 13:22
    TV appeals for missing relatives.
  • 13:22 - 13:25
    It's quite easy to predict
    when the relatives are missing
  • 13:25 - 13:28
    and when the appealers have in fact
    murdered the relatives themselves.
  • 13:28 - 13:32
    So hoax appealers are more likely
    to shake their heads, to look away,
  • 13:32 - 13:33
    and to make errors in their speech,
  • 13:33 - 13:35
    whereas genuine appealers are more likely
  • 13:35 - 13:38
    to express hope that the person
    will return safely
  • 13:38 - 13:40
    and to avoid brutal language.
  • 13:40 - 13:44
    So, for example, they might say
    "taken from us" rather than "killed."
  • 13:44 - 13:45
    Speaking of which,
  • 13:45 - 13:47
    it's about time I killed this talk,
  • 13:47 - 13:49
    but before I do, I just want to give you
  • 13:49 - 13:50
    in 30 seconds
  • 13:50 - 13:53
    the overarching myth of psychology.
  • 13:53 - 13:56
    So the myth is that psychology
  • 13:56 - 13:58
    is just a collection
    of interesting theories,
  • 13:58 - 13:59
    all of which say something useful
  • 13:59 - 14:01
    and all of which have something to offer.
  • 14:01 - 14:04
    What I hope to have shown you
    in the past few minutes
  • 14:04 - 14:05
    is that this isn't true.
  • 14:05 - 14:09
    What we need to do is assess
    psychological theories
  • 14:09 - 14:10
    by seeing what predictions they make,
  • 14:10 - 14:13
    whether that is that listening to Mozart
    makes you smarter,
  • 14:13 - 14:16
    that you learn better when information
  • 14:16 - 14:18
    is presented in your
    preferred learning style,
  • 14:18 - 14:22
    or whatever it is, all of these
    are testable empirical predictions,
  • 14:22 - 14:23
    and the only way we can make progress
  • 14:23 - 14:25
    is to test these predictions
    against the data
  • 14:25 - 14:28
    in tightly controlled
    experimental studies,
  • 14:28 - 14:31
    and it's only by doing so
    that we can hope to discover
  • 14:31 - 14:34
    which of these theories
    are well-supported,
  • 14:34 - 14:37
    and which, like all the ones
    I've told you about today, are myths.
  • 14:37 - 14:38
    Thank you.
  • 14:38 - 14:42
    (Applause)
Title:
The top 10 myths of psychology | Ben Ambridge | TEDxYouth@Manchester
Description:

TEDxYouth@Manchester is proud to present its 6th TEDxYouth conference on Wednesday 5th November 2014. Our event is presented to 450 post 16 students from The Fallibroome Academy in Macclesfield, UK and to over 150 invited students from local schools. We live stream our conference around the world and our theme is ‘Reset’ and the exciting programme includes brilliant speakers, and stunning student performances.

Ben Ambridge is Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Liverpool, where he researches children’s language development. He is the author of Psy-Q, which introduces readers to some of the major findings in Psychology via interactive puzzles, games, quizzes and tests.

About TEDx, x = independently organized event In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
15:23

English subtitles

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