The Human Behavior Podcast
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!
The Human Behavior Podcast
Latest Episodes
When Technology Outpaces Human Performance with Alan Kearney
Night vision keeps getting smarter, but our brains do not update on the same schedule. We’re joined by defense expert Alan Kearney, a former Irish Defence Forces officer who now works in European defense industry, to explore a problem that reac...
Probability & Language; The Cost of Being Certain
In this episode, we’re talking about probabilistic thinking and why language matters more than most people realize. The central idea is simple: most bad decisions don’t come from a lack of information, they come from mislabeling information.&nb...
Detecting A Cunning Opponent
Your gut has tried to warn you before. That flicker when someone lingers by a bathroom door, shadows you to the elevator, or blocks your path with a smile and a prop—it’s not paranoia, it’s a baseline breaking. We dig into a practical method fo...
Fan Mail
Hello, I just discovered your show and already a huge fan! In short, I have a weird visual disorder plus OCD and your show has helped me understand it better, so thank you! If you're interested, here's why- I have a rare neurological disorder called Visual Snow Syndrome which changes my visiual processing and interpretation (and thus perception of reality, time, and relationships with people) in very strange ways. Due to it being a neurological disorder and only first recorded in 2014, no one figured out that I was visually impaired until I was 25 years old, and it was reinforced consistently throughout my life that I was making it up. When I would get my eyes tested every year, they would say I have 20/20 vision (checking only my eyes, not the processing software) and tell my parents that I was lying. Fortunately/unfortunately, my brain was able to compensate enough to get by using my other senses until I was 25. This and OCD have made my life quite confusing, and your show is helping me make sense of it, so thank you!
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania