Gordon Pennycook is an Associate Professor at Cornell University. We talk about his upbringing in rural Northern Canada, how he got into academia, and his work on misinformation: why people share it and what can be done about it.
BJKS Podcast is a podcast about neuroscience, psychology, and anything vaguely related, hosted by Benjamin James Kuper-Smith.
Support the show: https://geni.us/bjks-patreon
Timestamps
0:00:00: Straight outta Carrot River: From Northern Canada to publishing in Nature
0:37:01: Exploration vs focusing on one topic: finding your research topic
0:48:57: A sense of having made it
0:54:17: Why apply reasoning research to religion?
0:59:45: Starting working on misinformation
1:08:20: Defining misinformation, disinformation, and fake news
1:15:52: Social media, the consumption of news, and Bayesian updating
1:24:48: Reasons for why people share misinformation
1:35:57: Are social media companies listening to Pennycook et al?
1:38:19: Using AI to change conspiracy beliefs
1:44:59: A book or paper more people should read
1:46:33: Something Gordon wishes he'd learnt sooner
1:48:12: Advice for PhD students/postdocs
Podcast links
- Website: https://geni.us/bjks-pod
- BlueSky: https://geni.us/pod-bsky
Gordon's links
- Website: https://geni.us/pennycook_web
- Google Scholar: https://geni.us/pennycook-scholar
- BlueSky: https://geni.us/pennycook-bsky
Ben's links
- Website: https://geni.us/bjks-web
- Google Scholar: https://geni.us/bjks-scholar
References
Costello, Pennycook & Rand (2024). Durably reducing conspiracy beliefs through dialogues with AI. Science.
Dawkins (2006). The God Delusion.
MacLeod, ... & Ozubko (2010). The production effect: delineation of a phenomenon. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
Nowak & Highfield (2012). Supercooperators: Altruism, evolution, and why we need each other to succeed.
Pennycook, ... & Fugelsang (2012). Analytic cognitive style predicts religious and paranormal belief. Cognition.
Pennycook, Fugelsang & Koehler (2015). What makes us think? A three-stage dual-process model of analytic engagement. Cognitive Psychology.
Pennycook, Cheyne, Barr, Koehler & Fugelsang (2015). On the reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit. Judgment and Decision making.
Pennycook & Rand (2019). Lazy, not biased: Susceptibility to partisan fake news is better explained by lack of reasoning than by motivated reasoning. Cognition.
Pennycook & Rand (2021). The psychology of fake news. Trends in cognitive sciences.
Rand (2016). Cooperation, fast and slow: Meta-analytic evidence for a theory of social heuristics and self-interested deliberation. Psychological Science.
Stanovich (2005). The robot's rebellion: Finding meaning in the age of Darwin.
Tappin, Pennycook & Rand (2020). Thinking clearly about causal inferences of politically motivated reasoning: Why paradigmatic study designs often undermine causal inference. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences.
Thompson, Turner & Pennycook (2011). Intuition, reason, and metacognition. Cognitive Psychology.